The Science of Discourse |
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Page xiii
... SECURED LANGUAGE AS AN OBJECT OF FERCEPTION Correctness Distinctness - 182 185 - 185 191 194 196 - 198 199 199 Brevity 200 Euphony - 202 Harmony Rhythm ยท 207 - 211 THE DIRECT RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT ASSOCIATION OF LANGUAGE FORM ...
... SECURED LANGUAGE AS AN OBJECT OF FERCEPTION Correctness Distinctness - 182 185 - 185 191 194 196 - 198 199 199 Brevity 200 Euphony - 202 Harmony Rhythm ยท 207 - 211 THE DIRECT RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT ASSOCIATION OF LANGUAGE FORM ...
Page 46
... secured by patching things together in a mechanical and external way ; it must arise from a unitary life impulse which orders and organizes every- thing to a supreme end . This principle is well 46 THE SCIENCE OF DISCOURSE .
... secured by patching things together in a mechanical and external way ; it must arise from a unitary life impulse which orders and organizes every- thing to a supreme end . This principle is well 46 THE SCIENCE OF DISCOURSE .
Page 50
... secured when the speaker or writer has a wealth of views and materials provided . The unity requires the action of the theme on the mind in ways varied and continuous till the mind grows into the state desired . Shakespeare , in ...
... secured when the speaker or writer has a wealth of views and materials provided . The unity requires the action of the theme on the mind in ways varied and continuous till the mind grows into the state desired . Shakespeare , in ...
Page 105
... secured by choosing the adequate unifying idea of purpose . This gives a definite current to the movement at the outset . Unity is further secured by giving the space and time boundaries of the whole . Unity is further secured by ...
... secured by choosing the adequate unifying idea of purpose . This gives a definite current to the movement at the outset . Unity is further secured by giving the space and time boundaries of the whole . Unity is further secured by ...
Page 108
... secured in first presenting the op- portunity for causes to produce the changes ; and then having purpose , cause and effect , and parts follow in their necessary order . This the anaylsis , if true , will properly set forth . - Unity ...
... secured in first presenting the op- portunity for causes to produce the changes ; and then having purpose , cause and effect , and parts follow in their necessary order . This the anaylsis , if true , will properly set forth . - Unity ...
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adaptation Allegory Amphibrach Anapaest apple argument Asyndeton attention attri attributes basis beauty called cause and effect clear common comparison and contrast composer conception condition connection conscious copula definite desire distinct effort Elegance elements emotions end sought energy essential euphony exposition expression fact feeling figure force given gives growing on trees guage hearer Hence idea ideal imagination impression individual induction inferred interpretation judgment language form law of unity liquid consonants literal literary logical means ment Metaphor Metonymy mind addressed move movement narration nature object oration oratory organic organic unity periodic sentence phases Pleonasm poem poetry Polysyndeton presented preter principle produced prose purpose reader reading relation requires resemblance rhetoric secured selection sense sentence Sir Launfal sound speaker style syllable syllogism Synecdoche Tautology tences theme things thought tion Trochee truth unified unit utterance vincing power whole words writer