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Página 19
I may well have thought of " withe " and " scythe , ” too ; and there would also be
the less perfect rhyme " alive . ” For " snakey , " on the other hand , there was no
such morphemic support ; on the contrary : “ shakey " —no good at all ; “ break ...
I may well have thought of " withe " and " scythe , ” too ; and there would also be
the less perfect rhyme " alive . ” For " snakey , " on the other hand , there was no
such morphemic support ; on the contrary : “ shakey " —no good at all ; “ break ...
Página 153
In English verse , line - end rhyme and near - rhyme are usually structural .
Intralinear or word - adjacent rhyme is occasional , as is alliteration . All the
syllablecontrolling schemes are structural insofar as they assist in metrical
arrangements .
In English verse , line - end rhyme and near - rhyme are usually structural .
Intralinear or word - adjacent rhyme is occasional , as is alliteration . All the
syllablecontrolling schemes are structural insofar as they assist in metrical
arrangements .
Página 367
Although rhyme by definition is based on a regular recurrence of equivalent
phonemes or phonemic groups , it would be an unsound oversimplification to
treat rhyme merely from the standpoint of sound . Rhyme necessarily involves the
...
Although rhyme by definition is based on a regular recurrence of equivalent
phonemes or phonemic groups , it would be an unsound oversimplification to
treat rhyme merely from the standpoint of sound . Rhyme necessarily involves the
...
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Índice
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
PART ONE POETIC PROCESS AND LITERARY ANALYSIS | 7 |
PART TWO STYLE IN FOLK NARRATIVE | 25 |
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Términos y frases comunes
alliteration analysis appear approach association becomes behavior called certain characteristic commonality complete concerned consonants 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 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 |