RepetitionAndreas Fischer |
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Page 92
... expression ( in his example : “ You have destroyed your enemies by jealousy , injuries , influence , perfidy " ) : the former moves upon its object more slowly and less often , the latter strikes more quickly and frequently ...
... expression ( in his example : “ You have destroyed your enemies by jealousy , injuries , influence , perfidy " ) : the former moves upon its object more slowly and less often , the latter strikes more quickly and frequently ...
Page 104
... expression , as in the first paragraph , with London's pedestrians " slipping and sliding since the day broke ( if this day ever broke ) .... " Dickens uses a variant whereby an expression in the conditional mode ( " ought to be " ) is ...
... expression , as in the first paragraph , with London's pedestrians " slipping and sliding since the day broke ( if this day ever broke ) .... " Dickens uses a variant whereby an expression in the conditional mode ( " ought to be " ) is ...
Page 240
... expression . The repetition which is a process of making the old into something new expropriates for Native American use the power in the English word of his oppressor , simply by setting his own fresh English and changing ceremony ...
... expression . The repetition which is a process of making the old into something new expropriates for Native American use the power in the English word of his oppressor , simply by setting his own fresh English and changing ceremony ...
Contents
An Introduction | 9 |
Fritz Senn Zürich | 10 |
J Allerton Basel | 35 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Alexander Pope anadiplosis anaphora bathed the dog beginning Brian Patten Byron Cambridge canto cave ceremony chiasmus chiastic clause climax context Cureton Delia devices Dickens discourse Don Juan dream Dryden echo echo-dialogue echo-passages echoic echolalia effects element-group emotional English enjambement epizeuxis exact repetition example explicature expression Finnegans Wake formal function grouping Hardy's implicature instance isocolon Jean Aitchison John language lexical verb structure linear rebound linguistic literary literature London Lord Marion Maud meaning motif movement Native American nature novel occurs Oxford passage passion patterns Peter bathed phrase poem poetic poetry polyptoton Pope's proform prolongation Quintilian quoted reduction reduplication relevance theory repeated rhetorical figures rhymes self-repetition semantic sense sentence sequence sound sound-repetitions speaker speech Sperber stanza story syllables syntactic Tannen Tayo Tennyson thing tropes truncation University of Zürich University Press utterance verbal voice words writing