Ben Jonson and the Language of Prose Comedy |
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Pagina 25
The cause - and - effect relation that Shakespeare indicates rather formally with such conjunctions as “ for ” and “ thereson . fore ” he may suggest more unobtrusively by such formulas 25 ANTECEDENTS.
The cause - and - effect relation that Shakespeare indicates rather formally with such conjunctions as “ for ” and “ thereson . fore ” he may suggest more unobtrusively by such formulas 25 ANTECEDENTS.
Pagina 168
... Jonson manages to suggest the continuousness of the knight's discourse , like a strip of tape forever unrolling , where no divisions are marked , and cadences are lacking even when the grammatical logic would allow them .
... Jonson manages to suggest the continuousness of the knight's discourse , like a strip of tape forever unrolling , where no divisions are marked , and cadences are lacking even when the grammatical logic would allow them .
Pagina 316
Jonson's avoidance of this trope , whether conscious or not , suggests the consistency with which he maintained the ... and the suggestion , based on verbal similarities , that Jonson used the Latin translation rather than the Greek ...
Jonson's avoidance of this trope , whether conscious or not , suggests the consistency with which he maintained the ... and the suggestion , based on verbal similarities , that Jonson used the Latin translation rather than the Greek ...
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Inhoudsopgave
Antecedents I | 1 |
Prose as Prose | 41 |
Rhetorics Tinkling Bell | 90 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
action alliteration already antimasque appears baroque Bartholomew becomes Busy character clause comedy comic continues course court Criticism Disc effect elements Elizabethan English Epicene expression fact Fair feeling figures final follow folly fools formal further hand haue humors Jonson Jonsonian kind king ladies language leads learned least less linguistic live logical London looke Love manner masque matter meaning merely moral Morose nature never object once Overdo passage pattern perhaps period person phrases play plot present produce prose puppet realism reference relation remains rhetorical satire scene seems sense sentence Shakespeare shift short social sound speak speaker speech spirit stage stand Studies style suggest symbol syntax talk tends theater things thinke thou thought tion true Truewit turn verbal verse whole writers