The Practical Elements of Rhetoric: With Illustrative Examples 1887 |
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Page 302
... INTERPRETATION . Scope of Interpretation . - This form of reproduction is dis- cussed first , because it is the necessary basis of all others ; any process by which thought already existent is worked over and pre- sented in another ...
... INTERPRETATION . Scope of Interpretation . - This form of reproduction is dis- cussed first , because it is the necessary basis of all others ; any process by which thought already existent is worked over and pre- sented in another ...
Page 303
... Interpretation . - As regards the purpose for which it is made , two aspects of interpretation are to be distinguished . 1. Interpretation for its own sake , which is the staple of that considerable body of writing found in commentaries ...
... Interpretation . - As regards the purpose for which it is made , two aspects of interpretation are to be distinguished . 1. Interpretation for its own sake , which is the staple of that considerable body of writing found in commentaries ...
Page 305
... Interpretation . evident that interpretative judgment of an author's work , to be adequate , must be communion with the author's mind ; it is trac- ing the current of his invention from its final result back to its be- ginnings . The ...
... Interpretation . evident that interpretative judgment of an author's work , to be adequate , must be communion with the author's mind ; it is trac- ing the current of his invention from its final result back to its be- ginnings . The ...
Contents
Definition of Rhetoric | 1 |
Style in General | 13 |
Diction | 27 |
Copyright | |
29 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Practical Elements of Rhetoric; with Illustrative Examples John Franklin Genung No preview available - 2013 |
The Practical Elements of Rhetoric: With Illustrative Examples John Franklin Genung No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
according already application argument become beginning better called cause character clause clearness conclusion connected construction course definite depends determined direct discourse distinction effect elements employed English especially essay example expression fact feeling figure force give given habit hand head idea illustrate imagination important indicated instance interest introduction invention kind language laws leading less literary literature look manner material means merely mind nature needs never NOTE object observed occasion once paragraph particular passage perhaps person poetry preceding present principle produce prose question reader reason reference regarded relation requires Rhetoric rule seen sense sentence significance sometimes sound speech statement structure style suggestion taken theme things thought tion true truth whole words writer