The Rudiments of English Grammar, 1761Scolar P., 1969 - 92 Seiten |
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Seite 37
... figure is called a Me- tonymy ; as the inventor , for the thing in- vented ; e . g . Mars , for war ; the author for ... figures it is ob ferved , that the or : bographical figures are not ufed with approbation , except in very fami ...
... figure is called a Me- tonymy ; as the inventor , for the thing in- vented ; e . g . Mars , for war ; the author for ... figures it is ob ferved , that the or : bographical figures are not ufed with approbation , except in very fami ...
Seite 54
... figure is , by frequent ufe , become evanefcent and forgotten , and thofe in which the metaphor is apparent and ... figures to which they are ap- plied are more or lefs confpicuous and glaring . Strong , bold figures , that have no ...
... figure is , by frequent ufe , become evanefcent and forgotten , and thofe in which the metaphor is apparent and ... figures to which they are ap- plied are more or lefs confpicuous and glaring . Strong , bold figures , that have no ...
Seite 72
... figure I made , after having done all this mif- chief . I difpatched my dinner , as foon as I could , with my ufual taciturnity ; when , to my utter confufion , the lady fecing me quitting my knife and fork , and laying them acrols one ...
... figure I made , after having done all this mif- chief . I difpatched my dinner , as foon as I could , with my ufual taciturnity ; when , to my utter confufion , the lady fecing me quitting my knife and fork , and laying them acrols one ...
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abfolutely adjectives ADVERBS alfo alſo anſwer auxiliary verbs beard bearing becauſe befides beſt cauſes change of termination circumſtances compariſon compofition compound tenfes confift conftruction conjunctive form converfation denote diftinct doth eafy eaſe eaſy English language eſtabliſhed Eurydice exactneſs expreffed expreffion faid fame feems feldom fenfe fenfibility fentence fhall fhould fignify fince fingular firft firſt fome fomething fometimes fpecies ftand ftyle fubftantives fubject fuch fufficient fure fyllables hath himſelf ideas JOSEPH PRIESTLEY language lefs likewife manner MENSTON mind moft moſt muft muſt nature neceffary nouns obferved Oblique cafe paffed paffions Participle prefent Participle pret perfon pleaſe pleaſure plural number Prefent Tenfe Preter Tenfe propriety PROSODY purpoſe radical form reafon reſemblance SECT ſhall ſome ſpeak ſpeech ſtate ſtyle taſte tenſe thee thefe themſelves theſe thine thing thofe thoſe Thou tion ufually underſtood univerfal uſe uſually verfe verſe whofe words writing
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Style and the Nineteenth-century British Critic: Sincere Mannerisms Jason Camlot Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2008 |