Early Tudor Criticism, Linguistic & LiteraryB. Blackwell, 1940 - 177 |
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Strona 43
... learned , who could only approach it by versions in their mother tongue . The translators ' recognition of the need for disseminating knowledge is reiterated in their prefaces . If the literature of entertainment reaches this public in ...
... learned , who could only approach it by versions in their mother tongue . The translators ' recognition of the need for disseminating knowledge is reiterated in their prefaces . If the literature of entertainment reaches this public in ...
Strona 45
... learned men of other nations have ben and presently are . 3 England is at this time avid to receive all supplies of new knowledge which the translators can provide and claims to be by no means inferior in intellectual power to other ...
... learned men of other nations have ben and presently are . 3 England is at this time avid to receive all supplies of new knowledge which the translators can provide and claims to be by no means inferior in intellectual power to other ...
Strona 46
... learned . It is of men of the calibre of Gardiner and his sup- porters that Hoby speaks when he says that Conscious of the novelty of their enterprise , the trans-. our men weene it sufficient to have a perfecte knowledge , to no other ...
... learned . It is of men of the calibre of Gardiner and his sup- porters that Hoby speaks when he says that Conscious of the novelty of their enterprise , the trans-. our men weene it sufficient to have a perfecte knowledge , to no other ...
Spis treści
The Earliest Tudor Phase I | 1 |
The Translation of the Bible | 23 |
Secular Translation and Translators | 42 |
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allegory Arte of Rhetorique Ascham authors Bible translators boke Cambridge circle Caxton Chaucer Cheke Cicero classical languages comedy contemporary 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 Greek greke Grimald guage hath haue Hawes Ibid importance iudgement John knowledge Latin latyne learning lerned lernyng letters literary and linguistic literature Lydgate Magdalen College School maner matter mediaeval ment Middle Ages Mirror for Magistrates moche moral Nicholas Udall Plautus poetic poetry poets precept Preface Prologue prose purely Quintilian reading Renascence period rhetoric rhetoricians Richard Sherry rude rules says scholars scholarship Scholemaster Scriptures sentence Sherry 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 wordes writers Wyatt wyll