Style: Writing as the Discovery of OutlookOxford University Press, 1970 - 280 pagina's |
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Pagina vii
Writing as the Discovery of Outlook Richard M. Eastman. Foreword to the Teacher Premises Two complementary premises underlie this book - that style is outlook and that outlook is discovered through the activity of writing itself . A ...
Writing as the Discovery of Outlook Richard M. Eastman. Foreword to the Teacher Premises Two complementary premises underlie this book - that style is outlook and that outlook is discovered through the activity of writing itself . A ...
Pagina 27
... outlook in language and , beyond lan- guage , in the imaginations of your readers . This can happen whether by " outlook " is meant your total way of life - your faith or your philosophy- or your temporary valuation of a given subject ...
... outlook in language and , beyond lan- guage , in the imaginations of your readers . This can happen whether by " outlook " is meant your total way of life - your faith or your philosophy- or your temporary valuation of a given subject ...
Pagina
... Outlook RICHARD M. EASTMAN This book develops an approach to writing based on the complementary premises that the process of writing is the discovery of outlook and that outlook is style . Professor Eastman illustrates how writing can ...
... Outlook RICHARD M. EASTMAN This book develops an approach to writing based on the complementary premises that the process of writing is the discovery of outlook and that outlook is style . Professor Eastman illustrates how writing can ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preview | 3 |
Three Ways of Seeing | 13 |
Three Ways of Focusing | 22 |
Copyright | |
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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