Studies in Rhetoric and Public Speaking: In Honor of James Albert WinansAlexander Magnus Drummond Russell & Russell, 1962 - 299 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 20
Página 48
... definite class of subjects . . . . The duty of rhetoric is to deal with such matters as we deliberate on without arts or systems to guide us , in the hearing of persons who cannot take in at a glance a complicated argument , or follow a ...
... definite class of subjects . . . . The duty of rhetoric is to deal with such matters as we deliberate on without arts or systems to guide us , in the hearing of persons who cannot take in at a glance a complicated argument , or follow a ...
Página 221
... definite metric pattern . A. C. Clark , Prose Rhythm in English : " The essence , however , of rhythm both in prose and poetry is regularity of beat . . . . In English the trochaic movement pervades the whole sentence and frequently ...
... definite metric pattern . A. C. Clark , Prose Rhythm in English : " The essence , however , of rhythm both in prose and poetry is regularity of beat . . . . In English the trochaic movement pervades the whole sentence and frequently ...
Página 268
... definite specialization of the bab- bling sounds . " Ma - ma " begins to be associated with the mother , and " pa - pa " with the father . This change is , of course , the result of training . In the study of the development both of ...
... definite specialization of the bab- bling sounds . " Ma - ma " begins to be associated with the mother , and " pa - pa " with the father . This change is , of course , the result of training . In the study of the development both of ...
Contenido
PLATO AND ARISTOTLE ON RHETORIC AND RHETORICIANS | 3 |
A LATE MEDIEVAL TRACTATE ON PREACHING | 61 |
FRANCIS BACON THE POLITICAL ORATOR | 91 |
Otras 7 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Studies in Rhetoric and Public Speaking: In Honor of James Albert Winans Alexander Magnus Drummond Vista de fragmentos - 1962 |
Términos y frases comunes
appear argument Aristotle attempt attention audience authority Bacon believe Burke called cause common concerned connection considered criticism definite dialectic discourse discussion distinction effect eloquence Emerson emotional English essay example expression fact feeling give given Gorgias hearers History idea important influence interest Journals knowledge language laws learned less Letters literary literature London Lord matter means method mind moral nature never opinion orator oratory passage perhaps personality persuasion philosopher phonetics Plato political popular practice preacher preaching present principles probably prose question reason regarded relation rhetoric rhetoricians rhythm says seems sense sentence sermon significant Socrates sophists sounds speaker speaking Spedding speech stuttering style suggested teachers teaching theme theory things thought tion true truth turn voice whole writing written York