The English of Shakespeare: Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius Caesar |
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Страница x
in the speech numbered 117 ; the insertion of " not ” after “ Has he , ” in that
numbered 401 ; and the transposition of the two names Lucilius and Lucius in
that numbered 520. The first and second of these three corrections are of little
moment ...
in the speech numbered 117 ; the insertion of " not ” after “ Has he , ” in that
numbered 401 ; and the transposition of the two names Lucilius and Lucius in
that numbered 520. The first and second of these three corrections are of little
moment ...
Страница xi
... which have been usually suppressed , although ' em remains familiar enough
in our colloquial speech , or at any rate is still perfectly intelligible and
unambiguous , and moe is sometimes the only form that will suit the exigencies of
the verse ...
... which have been usually suppressed , although ' em remains familiar enough
in our colloquial speech , or at any rate is still perfectly intelligible and
unambiguous , and moe is sometimes the only form that will suit the exigencies of
the verse ...
Страница xii
... and the changes that our national speech has undergone since his age . The
English of the sixteenth century is in various respects a different language from
that of the nineteenth . The words and constructions are not throughout the same
...
... and the changes that our national speech has undergone since his age . The
English of the sixteenth century is in various respects a different language from
that of the nineteenth . The words and constructions are not throughout the same
...
Страница 1
... in Warwickshire , were of good condition . The name in provincial speech was
probably sounded Shackspeare or Shacksper ; but even in the poet's own day its
more refined or literary pronunciation seems to have been the same ( 1 ) ...
... in Warwickshire , were of good condition . The name in provincial speech was
probably sounded Shackspeare or Shacksper ; but even in the poet's own day its
more refined or literary pronunciation seems to have been the same ( 1 ) ...
Страница 21
... self - evident that the speech of Polixenes in the Third Scene of the Fourth Act
of the Winter's Tale should run as follows ? - Nature is made better by no mean
But nature makes that mean . So ever that art , Which you say adds to nature , is
an ...
... self - evident that the speech of Polixenes in the Third Scene of the Fourth Act
of the Winter's Tale should run as follows ? - Nature is made better by no mean
But nature makes that mean . So ever that art , Which you say adds to nature , is
an ...
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