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" Custom is the most certain mistress of language, as the public stamp makes the current money. But we must not be too frequent with the mint, every day coining, nor fetch words from the extreme and utmost ages ; since the chief virtue of a style is perspicuity,... "
The Works of Ben Jonson...: With Notes Critical and Explanatory, and a ... - Página 218
por Ben Jonson, William Gifford - 1816
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Effective Revenue Writing: Advanced course, by C. D. Linton

United States. Internal Revenue Service - 1961 - 216 páginas
...flatulent statement when he sees it. How about this for economy of statement and solidity of counsel ? "The chief virtue of a style is perspicuity, and nothing so vicious in it as to need an interpreter." Or this : "Our composition must be more accurate in the beginning and end than in the middle, and in...
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Effective Revenue Writing: Advanced course

United States. Internal Revenue Service, Lucile B. Spurlock, Luthera Burton Dawson - 1961 - 216 páginas
...flatulent statement when he sees it. How about this for economy of statement and solidity of counsel ? "The chief virtue of a style is perspicuity, and nothing so vicious in it as to need an interpreter." Or this : "Our composition must be more accurate in the beginning and end than in the middle, and in...
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Effective Revenue Writing, 2: An Advanced Course Designed to Help ...

Calvin Darlington Linton - 1962 - 216 páginas
...flatulent statement when he sees it. How about this for economy of statement and solidity of counsel ? "The chief virtue of a style is perspicuity, and nothing so vicious in it as to need an interpreter." Or this : "Our composition must be more accurate in the beginning and end than in the middle, and in...
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Power in Verse: Metaphor and Metonymy in the Renaissance Lyric

Jane Hedley - 1988 - 222 páginas
...the Elizabethan poets, is "customary." "Custom," he explains (again making direct use of Quintilian), "is the most certain mistress of language, as the public stamp makes the current money."22 The coinage analogy suggests that by "custom" he would be understood to mean not only "common...
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The Cambridge Companion to Spenser

Andrew Hadfield - 2001 - 302 páginas
...claim that archaisms 'lend a kind of majesty to style', Jonson stresses the importance of 'custom': Custom is the most certain mistress of language, as...perspicuity, and nothing so vicious in it, as to need an interpreter.10 It could be objected that the glossary to The Shepheardes Calender illustrates the need...
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The English Renaissance: An Anthology of Sources and Documents

Kate Aughterson - 2002 - 628 páginas
...most certain mistress of language, as the puhlic stamp makes the current money, But we must not he too frequent with the mint, every day coining. Nor fetch words from the extreme and unnost ages, since the chief virme of a style is perspicuity, and nothing so vicious in it as to need...
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"Unnoticed in the Casual Light of Day": Philip Larkin and the Plain Style

Tijana Stojković - 2006 - 248 páginas
...ancestors of that nicety of statement in English poetry, clearly supports the stable currency of words: "Custom is the most certain mistress of language,...be too frequent with the mint, every day coining" (Discoveries lines 2386—89). Across a few centuries, and after Valery, Philip Larkin writes in "Modesties":...
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Jonson, Shakespeare and Early Modern Virgil

Margaret Tudeau-Clayton - 2006 - 284 páginas
...translated from Quintilian -Jonson adds his own exhortation against the frequent coinage of new words - 'But we must not be too frequent with the mint, every day coyning' - and Quintilian's against persistent recourse to archaisms - 'Nor fetch words from the extreme...
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The Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins

Elsie Elizabeth Phare - 1967 - 170 páginas
...have found it a serious accusation: though it is true that as a " classical" critic who held that " Custom is the most certain mistress of language, as the public stamp makes the current money", Jonson begins with assumptions inimical to a just appreciation of Hopkins. Unless the reader is prepared...
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