Style: Writing as the Discovery of OutlookOxford University Press, 1970 - 280 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 22
Pagina 27
... develop your outlook mainly through the six elements described in the last two chapters : general assertion , substan- tiating detail , application of assumptions , selection , placement , and or- ganization . The more carefully you ...
... develop your outlook mainly through the six elements described in the last two chapters : general assertion , substan- tiating detail , application of assumptions , selection , placement , and or- ganization . The more carefully you ...
Pagina 168
... develop a climactic order of ideas ( as just seen ) , to group or link similar ideas , to list the items of a series ... developed , it urges you forward to new parallels . The fullest eloquence of parallel structure can be seen in the ...
... develop a climactic order of ideas ( as just seen ) , to group or link similar ideas , to list the items of a series ... developed , it urges you forward to new parallels . The fullest eloquence of parallel structure can be seen in the ...
Pagina 230
... develop the meaning now in sight . The writer can fix this meaning by framing a trial thesis - a single sen- tence which states his topic and what he sees important in it - for example : The censorship of pornography causes more damage ...
... develop the meaning now in sight . The writer can fix this meaning by framing a trial thesis - a single sen- tence which states his topic and what he sees important in it - for example : The censorship of pornography causes more damage ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preview | 3 |
Three Ways of Seeing | 13 |
Three Ways of Focusing | 22 |
Copyright | |
21 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
A. E. Housman abandoned ship activists adaptation of techniques assertive language audience campus Cecil censorship Choose clause connotation described in Chapter detail draft Dylan Thomas elements emotional English example Exercise fed the aardvark feel final footnote formal G. B. Shaw grammatical H. L. Mencken Hardy's headword imitation irony joke Jude the Obscure kind knowledge and disposition Lady Chatterley's Lover lawn letter Llewellyn look main-clause margin break material means mind modifier North Central College notes noun novel organization original outlook paper paragraph parallel structure passage pattern periodic sentence phrase poetry principle probation prose quotation reader revision rhythm selection sense sentence structure sentimental signals sound stress student style syntactical syntax techniques method described Ted Hughes term things Thomas Hardy tion tone topic verb Vespucian vocabulary W. H. Auden word writing