The Port Folio, المجلد 2Editor and Asbury Dickens, 1809 |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 100
الصفحة 2
... give such rules for placing the emphasis , ás may , in some measure , facilitate this difficult part of elocution , but few have gone further than to tell us , that we must place the emphasis on that word , in reading , which we would ...
... give such rules for placing the emphasis , ás may , in some measure , facilitate this difficult part of elocution , but few have gone further than to tell us , that we must place the emphasis on that word , in reading , which we would ...
الصفحة 4
... give the sense of the author : for the import plainly is , that a lively imagination , not merely absent from beautiful scenes , but even in a dungeon , can form scenes more beautiful than any in nature . This plenitude of meaning in a ...
... give the sense of the author : for the import plainly is , that a lively imagination , not merely absent from beautiful scenes , but even in a dungeon , can form scenes more beautiful than any in nature . This plenitude of meaning in a ...
الصفحة 7
... give energy to language , must ever be considered as subject to the pre- cision of grammatical truth : for if a correct observance of the laws of orthography and syntax do not accompany the reader's orthoepy and emphasis , his oratory ...
... give energy to language , must ever be considered as subject to the pre- cision of grammatical truth : for if a correct observance of the laws of orthography and syntax do not accompany the reader's orthoepy and emphasis , his oratory ...
الصفحة 16
... give them authority with the vulgar by persuading them that they were inspired by some divinity , as those of Osiris by Mercury , those of Minos by Jupiter , those of Solon by Minerva , those of Lycur- gus by Apollo , and those of Numa ...
... give them authority with the vulgar by persuading them that they were inspired by some divinity , as those of Osiris by Mercury , those of Minos by Jupiter , those of Solon by Minerva , those of Lycur- gus by Apollo , and those of Numa ...
الصفحة 19
... give offence , for no one understands what he means . Martial alone with his equivoca- tions might have provoked his anger , but he swears that he never saw his face , nor knew any thing of him . As for myself , I can say without vanity ...
... give offence , for no one understands what he means . Martial alone with his equivoca- tions might have provoked his anger , but he swears that he never saw his face , nor knew any thing of him . As for myself , I can say without vanity ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
accent Adam Smith admiration affection American amusement antimony appears attention beautiful Billy Taylor Blackletter called captain cause character christian colour command delight Derry door Edinburg elegant emotions expression Falstaff favour feelings frequently genius gentleman give grace hand happy heart honour HORATIO GATES human ideas labours lady Laertes language learned letter limestone literary M'Intosh manner means ment merit mind moral mountains mulatto nature never Nicholas Biddle o'er object observed occasion OLDSCHOOL opinion pain pass passions pause perhaps person Petrarch Philadelphia pleasure poem poet Polonius PORT FOLIO present principles QUIZ racter reader respect scarcely scene Seneca Lake sentiments Shakspeare shore Sir CH society soon soul spirit style sweet syllables talents taste thing thou thought tion tophe verse vessel virtue Voltaire whip-poor-will whole words writing young