Early Tudor Criticism, Linguistic & LiteraryB. Blackwell, 1964 - 177 |
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Strona 9
... style is all the more important in the training of sixteenth century linguistic interests since the fashion for patterned speech persists in the ' Euphuism ' which was one of the most pronounced trends of literary language in the full ...
... style is all the more important in the training of sixteenth century linguistic interests since the fashion for patterned speech persists in the ' Euphuism ' which was one of the most pronounced trends of literary language in the full ...
Strona 53
... style . Because of their obligations to their unlearned audience and the value of their material , they had to be guiltless of obscurity or undue cultivation of style at the expense of matter . Their work had to be comprehensible to ...
... style . Because of their obligations to their unlearned audience and the value of their material , they had to be guiltless of obscurity or undue cultivation of style at the expense of matter . Their work had to be comprehensible to ...
Strona 118
... style and genres of literature . The guiding principle of rhetoric is decorum , the law which enjoins the choice of appropriate words and the mainten- ance of selected style for each subject . It is from this principle that there spring ...
... style and genres of literature . The guiding principle of rhetoric is decorum , the law which enjoins the choice of appropriate words and the mainten- ance of selected style for each subject . It is from this principle that there spring ...
Spis treści
The Earliest Tudor Phase I | 1 |
The Translation of the Bible | 23 |
Secular Translation and Translators | 42 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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allegory Arte of Rhetorique Ascham aureate authors Bible translation boke Cambridge circle Caxton Chaucer Cheke Cicero classical languages comedy critical Demosthenes diction discussion drama E. K. Chambers E.E.T.S. Original Series Early Tudor period elocutio eloquence England English language Erasmus euery fifteenth Gavin Douglas genres Gouernour grammar school Greek greke Grimald guage hath haue Hawes Ibid importance iudgement John knowledge Latin latyne learning lerned lernynge literary and linguistic literature Lydgate maner matter means mediaeval Middle Ages moche moral Nicholas Udall Plautus poetic poetry poets precept Preface Prologue prose Quintilian reading Renascence period rhetoric rhetoricians Richard Sherry rude rules says scholars scholarship Scholemaster scripture sentence Sherry Sir John Cheke Sir Thomas Elyot sixteenth century Skelton speech style Terence theyr Thomas Phaer thyng tion tonge tongue tradition tragedy tyme vernacular vsed Vulgaria Whittinton Wilson wold woordes wordes writers Wyatt