Tudor to Augustan English: A Study in Syntax and Style from Caxton to JohnsonDeutsch, 1969 - 242 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 35
Pagina 40
... examples occur in the quotations from Jonson and Shakespeare already used . Another colloquialism , possibly popularized by Cockney , was the adverbial use of the comparative or superlative of adjectives , without the suffix -ly . Sweet ...
... examples occur in the quotations from Jonson and Shakespeare already used . Another colloquialism , possibly popularized by Cockney , was the adverbial use of the comparative or superlative of adjectives , without the suffix -ly . Sweet ...
Pagina 109
... examples reveal simply a shift of meaning . But there are other prepositional uses , that strike the reader more forcibly , either as the idiomatic peculiarities of a period , or the eccentricities of individual writers . Here are examples ...
... examples reveal simply a shift of meaning . But there are other prepositional uses , that strike the reader more forcibly , either as the idiomatic peculiarities of a period , or the eccentricities of individual writers . Here are examples ...
Pagina 190
... examples from the best authors of the past three centuries . But Lowth's decisive preference for one habit of expression rather than another led him into historical inaccuracies , as when he maintained of the possessive case : ' Christ ...
... examples from the best authors of the past three centuries . But Lowth's decisive preference for one habit of expression rather than another led him into historical inaccuracies , as when he maintained of the possessive case : ' Christ ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface | 11 |
Introduction | 13 |
Social Strata and Levels of Communication | 21 |
Copyright | |
24 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
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