Seven Types of AmbiguityChatto and Windus, 1930 - 325 Seiten |
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Seite 161
William Empson. have achieved its object if it described the attitude only of the majority of his readers . It is that description of a great eighteenth - century mansion in which Pope is ... object if it described the attitude only ...
William Empson. have achieved its object if it described the attitude only of the majority of his readers . It is that description of a great eighteenth - century mansion in which Pope is ... object if it described the attitude only ...
Seite 170
... object ; indeed , I put the second version down less from conviction than because I cannot now read the line without thinking of it . For the various senses of line 4 we must first con- sider the meaning of tender , which is almost ...
... object ; indeed , I put the second version down less from conviction than because I cannot now read the line without thinking of it . For the various senses of line 4 we must first con- sider the meaning of tender , which is almost ...
Seite 319
... object known into a field of similar objects , in some order , so that it has some degree of balance and safety ; you may know several ways of getting to the thing , other things like it but different , enough of its ingredients and the ...
... object known into a field of similar objects , in some order , so that it has some degree of balance and safety ; you may know several ways of getting to the thing , other things like it but different , enough of its ingredients and the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjective already analysis apprehension beauty Chaucer comparison conceived Conchubor connected conscious consider contradiction convey couplet course Crashaw critic death Deirdre device doubt dramatic irony effect Elizabethan English English language example eyes fact fall feeling generalisation give grammar grief Heaven heroic couplet human idea implied insist interest irony irrelevant judgment language less Lord G Macbeth matter Measure for Measure merely metaphor metaphysical poets mind mode mood Naisi nature night normal notion noun once one's onomatopoeia opposite Othello Pandarus particular Pathetic Fallacy perhaps phrase poem poet poetical poetry Pope praise puns Pure Sound quatrain reader reasons rhythm Robert Graves seaze seems sense sensible sentence Shakespeare situation Sonnet sort statement suggestion synæsthesia syntax tautology tears thee things third type thou thought tion trying type of ambiguity variety verb verbal verse weep whole word