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Página 253
The Pronouns of Power and Solidarity ROGER BROWN ALBERT GILMAN Most
of us in speaking and writing English use only one pronoun of address ; we say “
you ” to many persons and " you ” to one person . The pronoun “ thou ” is ...
The Pronouns of Power and Solidarity ROGER BROWN ALBERT GILMAN Most
of us in speaking and writing English use only one pronoun of address ; we say “
you ” to many persons and " you ” to one person . The pronoun “ thou ” is ...
Página 265
It must be asked why the equalitarian ideal was expressed in a universal T rather
than a universal V or , as a third alternative , why there was not a shift of semantic
from power to solidarity with both pronouns being retained . The answer lies ...
It must be asked why the equalitarian ideal was expressed in a universal T rather
than a universal V or , as a third alternative , why there was not a shift of semantic
from power to solidarity with both pronouns being retained . The answer lies ...
Página 274
In his study of the French pronouns Schliebitz ( 353 ) found the first examples of
these expressive uses in literature of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ...
Racine reserved the expressive pronoun as some composers save the cymbals .
In his study of the French pronouns Schliebitz ( 353 ) found the first examples of
these expressive uses in literature of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ...
Racine reserved the expressive pronoun as some composers save the cymbals .
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Índice
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PART TWO STYLE IN FOLK NARRATIVE | 25 |
PART THREE LINGUISTIC APPROACHES TO VERBAL | 55 |
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Términos y frases comunes
alliteration analysis appear approach association becomes behavior called certain characteristic commonality complete concerned course critics definition described deviations discussion distinction dominant effect elements English example expect expressive fact final function give given grammatical important indicate individual instance interest interpretation kind language learning less linguistic literary literature matter meaning measures meter metrical norm notes objective occur particular pattern perhaps person phonemic phrase poem poet poetic poetry positions possible present probably problem pronoun question reading reference relation relative responses rhyme rhythm rules seems selection semantic sense sentence similar simply situation sonnet sort sound speak speech stress structure style stylistic subjects suggest syllables talk things tradition units University utterances variation verbal verbs verse whole word writing
Referencias a este libro
Understanding Pragmatics Jef Verschueren,Jan Verschueren No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 1999 |