Word by Word: The Language of MemoryCornell University Press, 1990 - 257 σελίδες |
Αναζήτηση στο βιβλίο
Αποτελέσματα 1 - 3 από τα 24.
Σελίδα 186
... context . But Shakespeare's phrase also inhabits a general context of meaning . We will be able to read it more fully once we have discovered Macduff's full metaphor of his children as chickens and Macbeth as a bird of prey , but the ...
... context . But Shakespeare's phrase also inhabits a general context of meaning . We will be able to read it more fully once we have discovered Macduff's full metaphor of his children as chickens and Macbeth as a bird of prey , but the ...
Σελίδα 187
... context for us to read in . It will help us understand that a mood is articulating itself through the agency of a symbol . But that mood and that symbol have meaning only within the context of the poem itself . The swooping hell - kite ...
... context for us to read in . It will help us understand that a mood is articulating itself through the agency of a symbol . But that mood and that symbol have meaning only within the context of the poem itself . The swooping hell - kite ...
Σελίδα 212
... context in which predication occurs . This act of predication in a context must always be historical . Consider , for instance , the historical grammar of the sentence " She saw what was happening . " Onto the scene of an action strides ...
... context in which predication occurs . This act of predication in a context must always be historical . Consider , for instance , the historical grammar of the sentence " She saw what was happening . " Onto the scene of an action strides ...
Περιεχόμενα
The Comic History of This Man Goddard | 17 |
The Virtual History of the Undivided | 35 |
The Joke about the Man from the East | 53 |
Πνευματικά δικαιώματα | |
9 άλλες ενότητες δεν εμφανίζονται
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
able Adolf Hitler American appears archive become beginning believe body called century chronicle comes Consider context continue course criticism culture dead death desire Eliot Emily Dickinson emotion England event example existence experience fact feel grammar hand happened hear hope human idea Individual instance interpretation irony language letters light literary literature lives look matter meaning memory metaphor mind moral nature never novel objects once original ourselves passed past perhaps person picture poem poet political possible present readers reality realize record reference remains remember rhetoric seems sense sentence separate sequence significance silence song South speak stand story tell things thought Tradition tried turn understand University virtual history vocabulary Waste Land words write written York