Modes of RhetoricSt. Martin's Press, 1964 - 255 من الصفحات |
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النتائج 1-3 من 36
الصفحة 2
... tell which qualities are common to a class and which unique . A class is general when the things in it share a ... tell which qualities to dismiss because of their novelty ; you can't particularize unless you can tell which qualities to ...
... tell which qualities are common to a class and which unique . A class is general when the things in it share a ... tell which qualities to dismiss because of their novelty ; you can't particularize unless you can tell which qualities to ...
الصفحة 55
... tell all you can about it , you will not know whether you have described or defined it . Only by comparisons and contrasts with like things in the universe everybody knows can you tell whether you have preferred the unique , distinctive ...
... tell all you can about it , you will not know whether you have described or defined it . Only by comparisons and contrasts with like things in the universe everybody knows can you tell whether you have preferred the unique , distinctive ...
الصفحة 61
... tell his old companions what the light is like . ( Republic 514 ff . ) If you begin with many or all possible things , and aim to derive numerous classes from them , you will carry compari- son and contrast to even greater lengths . You ...
... tell his old companions what the light is like . ( Republic 514 ff . ) If you begin with many or all possible things , and aim to derive numerous classes from them , you will carry compari- son and contrast to even greater lengths . You ...
المحتوى
Abstract and Concrete Sentences | 1 |
Description | 29 |
Definition | 55 |
حقوق النشر | |
7 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abstract action answer aorist Aristotle Arkadina begin Bert Boanerges Boswell called chaw Chekhov considered conversation course cv'd Cyrus Dalloway defined definition dialogue discourse distinct dominant drama drink E. B. White E. S. Dallas elegant variation example eyes feel G. K. Chesterton girls give Gwendolen Hamlet head human infinite Jack Johnson Leopold Bloom lines literary literature logical looked lyric mean mimetic mind narration narrative never novel nymphets occurs opinion Orontas painting passage past tense perhaps person persuasion Plato play poem poet poetry Polonius present tense pretensions of immortality qualities quatrain recurrent result reverie rhetorical modes seems sentence sequence Socrates Socratic method sometimes sonnet speaker Stark Young statement static story stream of consciousness suggests talk tell temporal things thought tion Trigorin truth unique usually verbs wine words writer