Rhetoric--ritual: A Study of the Communicative and Aesthetic Dimensions of LanguageDickenson Publishing Company, 1972 - 297 Seiten |
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Seite 67
... define argument as consisting of three processes : deduction , induction , and the most frequently used process , definition . Deduction is probably most familiarly described as a process of reasoning from the general to the specific ...
... define argument as consisting of three processes : deduction , induction , and the most frequently used process , definition . Deduction is probably most familiarly described as a process of reasoning from the general to the specific ...
Seite 72
... define gracefully or shoddily , clearly or furtively , we always define . To use language is to define , and to use language rhetorically is to emphasize the importance of defining . The finest Rhetoric is that in which both rhetorician ...
... define gracefully or shoddily , clearly or furtively , we always define . To use language is to define , and to use language rhetorically is to emphasize the importance of defining . The finest Rhetoric is that in which both rhetorician ...
Seite 128
... define language as a process that is basically aesthetic or artistic , for that leaves me in the position of having equated Rhetoric and Ritual , Rhetoric and imaginative or creative language . It is perfectly true that language is , at ...
... define language as a process that is basically aesthetic or artistic , for that leaves me in the position of having equated Rhetoric and Ritual , Rhetoric and imaginative or creative language . It is perfectly true that language is , at ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American argued argument Aristotle Arthur Koestler attitudes audience basic behavior believe called chapter Communication conflict constitute course create CYRANO define described drama E. E. Cummings elements emotional enthymeme essay ethical example exist fact FALSTAFF feel free verse Gettysburg Address god-terms human I. A. Richards idea important intelligent intrapersonal involved Jean-Paul Sartre Journal Kenneth Burke language acts listen logical look matter meaning metaphor nature nonverbal Northrop Frye notion obvious ourselves pattern person persuasive philosophical poem poetic poetry pollution problem prose Psychology readers reality reason responsibility Rhetoric and Ritual rhetorical act rhetorical discourse rhetorician rhythm rhythmical ritualistic Russell Tribunal Sartre seems sense sentence simply social sort speech statements structure Style Susanne Langer symbolic talk Thanodrin theory there's thing thought trans Tribunal trimeter utter verbal verse Vietnam W. H. Auden words York young