Tudor to Augustan English: A Study in Syntax and Style from Caxton to JohnsonDeutsch, 1969 - 242 pagina's |
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Pagina 140
... Elizabethan writers , who preferred a plural verb to the singular required in English since the eighteenth century : Spenser , Faerie Queene IV.1.3 . every man / Surchargd with wine , were heedlesse and ill - hedded Ibid IV.7.24 . It so ...
... Elizabethan writers , who preferred a plural verb to the singular required in English since the eighteenth century : Spenser , Faerie Queene IV.1.3 . every man / Surchargd with wine , were heedlesse and ill - hedded Ibid IV.7.24 . It so ...
Pagina 172
... Elizabethan writers is a reminder that organized rules of grammar are not indispensable to great writing . Phrase- making they showed to spring from the imaginative faculty ; the ordering of words in well - sounding patterns was largely ...
... Elizabethan writers is a reminder that organized rules of grammar are not indispensable to great writing . Phrase- making they showed to spring from the imaginative faculty ; the ordering of words in well - sounding patterns was largely ...
Pagina 205
... Elizabethan English ; will suggests determination , but shall and will were still loosely interchangeable . Line 15 contains a characteristic scholastic poeticism fairer then that word . To suggest that Portia is ' fairer than the word ...
... Elizabethan English ; will suggests determination , but shall and will were still loosely interchangeable . Line 15 contains a characteristic scholastic poeticism fairer then that word . To suggest that Portia is ' fairer than the word ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface | 11 |
Introduction | 13 |
Social Strata and Levels of Communication | 21 |
Copyright | |
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adjective adverbial clauses adverbs analytical language archaic Ascham auxiliary Ben Jonson Caxton Chapter Chaucer co-ordinating colloquial common compound conjunctions construction Dictionary e.g. EMIH eighteenth century Elizabethan EMIH EMIH F EMOH emphatic English Grammar English Language epithets express F₁ Faerie Queene function genitive gerund grammarians H. C. Wyld hath Henry Henry IV Ibid F idiomatic illustrate infinitive inflexion intransitive verbs inversion J.Caes Jespersen King James Bible Latin linguistic literary English literature logical London main clause meaning Middle English modern English negative noun clause Old English origin orthography Oxford participle passive periphrastic person phrases plays poetic poetry poets prepositions pronoun pronunciation prose regarded relative Revels rhetoric rhythm selfe sentence seventeenth century Shakespeare Shakespeare and Jonson Sir Thomas sixteenth century sonne Sonnet speake speech spelling Spenser structure style stylistic subjunctive subordinate clauses syllables syntactical tense thee thou tongue translation Tudor English usage verse word order writing