The Sentence-structure in John Dryden's An Essay of Dramatic PoesyKeisuisha, 1985 - 215 pages |
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Page 3
... stage of my study , I naturally followed great scholars such as H. Sweet , G. O. Curme , and O. Jespersen . Especially my mind was opened to a structural linguistic vein as in Jespersen's A Modern English Grammar 7 vols . often told by ...
... stage of my study , I naturally followed great scholars such as H. Sweet , G. O. Curme , and O. Jespersen . Especially my mind was opened to a structural linguistic vein as in Jespersen's A Modern English Grammar 7 vols . often told by ...
Page 80
... stage to the exactness of our next neighbours ? ' Though , ' said Eugenius , I am at all times ready to defend the honour of my country against the French , and to maintain , we are as well able to vanquish them with our pens , as our ...
... stage to the exactness of our next neighbours ? ' Though , ' said Eugenius , I am at all times ready to defend the honour of my country against the French , and to maintain , we are as well able to vanquish them with our pens , as our ...
Page 108
... stage , if the discourses have been long . I must therefore have stronger arguments , ere I am convinced that compassion 10 and mirth in the same subject destroy each other ; and in the mean time cannot but conclude , to the honour of ...
... stage , if the discourses have been long . I must therefore have stronger arguments , ere I am convinced that compassion 10 and mirth in the same subject destroy each other ; and in the mean time cannot but conclude , to the honour of ...
Contents
Diagrammatic Representation of the SentenceStructure | 23 |
Computer Analysis | 186 |
Conclusion | 197 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
୯୨ acknowledge action actors admiration Ancients appear appended argument Aristotle audience base minor sentences beauty Ben Johnson betwixt blank verse Catiline characters commended compass concernment constituent Corneille Corneille's Crites debaters discourse Dramatic Poesy DRYDEN'S AN ESSAY Dryden's prose embedded English Essay of Dramatic Eugenius F2 F F3 F fancy farther Fd2 F Fd3 F Fd3 Fd3 Fd4 F Fd6 Fd7 Fletcher following connectors honour Horace humour imagine John Dryden's Johnson judge judgment Julius Cæsar language Lat2 Lat3 Lat4 Lat5 Lat6 Lat7 Lat8 latter Lisideius major sentence consist Michio modern Molière narrator G Neander never observed Okayama University passions perfection persons plot poem poet reason represented rhyme scene Sejanus Seneca SENTENCE-STRUCTURE IN JOHN serious plays Shakespeare Silent Woman speak stage structural linguistic things thoughts thrice tragedies Unity unnatural words writ write