A System of RhetoricScholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 2002 - 673 pagina's |
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Pagina cxliii
Charles William Bardeen. CHAPTER II . TABLE - TALK . No fair adversary would urge loose table - talk : in controversy , and build serious infer- ences upon what was spoken in jest . — ATTERBURY , quoted in Johnson's Dictionary ...
Charles William Bardeen. CHAPTER II . TABLE - TALK . No fair adversary would urge loose table - talk : in controversy , and build serious infer- ences upon what was spoken in jest . — ATTERBURY , quoted in Johnson's Dictionary ...
Pagina cxliii
... talk by chattering to one an- other and saying what comes uppermost ; neither does reading suf- fice to this end single - handed . Good talk should first be recog- nized as such in others . Attention is the most influential tutor in the ...
... talk by chattering to one an- other and saying what comes uppermost ; neither does reading suf- fice to this end single - handed . Good talk should first be recog- nized as such in others . Attention is the most influential tutor in the ...
Pagina 27
... talk is im- possible . To such a person no communication should be made of less import than that England has declared war , that a new motor has been discovered , or that dinner is ready . Exaggeration of Preferences . - Table - talk is ...
... talk is im- possible . To such a person no communication should be made of less import than that England has declared war , that a new motor has been discovered , or that dinner is ready . Exaggeration of Preferences . - Table - talk is ...
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adjective adverb Aristotle asked audience avoid Bardeen beautiful black crows called character Charles Lamb Cicero clause Coleridge comma composition conversation Demosthenes discourse distinct effect English English language EXERCISE expression fact feel following sentences gentleman give hear hearers humor idea illustrations kind lady language laugh letter look Lord manner meaning ment mind natural never noun object observed one's orator perfect person perspicuity phrase pleasure poem poet poetry predicate preposition principle pronoun punctuation Quintilian quotation reader relative clause remark replied Rhetoric ridiculous rule sense Shakspere simile soft palate sometimes sound speak speaker speech story style Sydney Smith syllables Synecdoche talk taste tell tence things thought tion TOPICAL ANALYSIS truth uncon utterance verb verse voice words write York Sun young