Central Library OPAC University of Rajshahi

Literary English since Shakespeare / Edited by George Watson.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextLanguage: English Series: Galaxy bookPublication details: London, New York : Oxford University Press, 1970Description: x, 407 p. ; 21 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 820.9Β LIT 1970
Contents:
The current scene in linguistics, by N. Chomsky.--Realism and the three styles, by E. Auerbach.--The meaning of "literal," by O. Barfield.--On sentence-length, by G. U. Yule.--Monosyllabic lines and words, by A. C. Bradley.--Shakespeare and the language of poetry, by O. Jespersen.--The Baroque style in prose, by M. W. Croll.--Jonson's dramatic prose, by J. A. Barish.--The language of the metaphysicals, by G. Watson.--Milton and the vocabulary of verse and prose, by H. S. Davies.--Science and English prose style, by R. F. Jones.--The style of Dryden's prose, by W. P. Ker.--Pope and the syntax of satire, by J. P. W. Rogers.--Swift and syntactical connection, by L. T. Milic.--Irony in Eighteenth-Century fiction, by W. C. Booth.--The consistency of Johnson's style, by W. K. Wimsatt.--Syntax in Wordsworth's Prelude, by D. Davie.--Scott's linguistic vagaries, by E. M. W. Tillyard.--The language of the Victorians, by F. W. Bateson.--On Dickens, by W. A. Ward.--Dialect in the novels of Hardy and George Eliot, by P. Ingham.--The first paragraph of James's Ambassadors, by I. Watt.--The holy language of modernism, by D. Donoghue.
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Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
Books Central Library, University of Rajshahi Non-fiction 820.9 LIT 1970 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) C-2 Available BDT A51273

Includes bibliographical references.

The current scene in linguistics, by N. Chomsky.--Realism and the three styles, by E. Auerbach.--The meaning of "literal," by O. Barfield.--On sentence-length, by G. U. Yule.--Monosyllabic lines and words, by A. C. Bradley.--Shakespeare and the language of poetry, by O. Jespersen.--The Baroque style in prose, by M. W. Croll.--Jonson's dramatic prose, by J. A. Barish.--The language of the metaphysicals, by G. Watson.--Milton and the vocabulary of verse and prose, by H. S. Davies.--Science and English prose style, by R. F. Jones.--The style of Dryden's prose, by W. P. Ker.--Pope and the syntax of satire, by J. P. W. Rogers.--Swift and syntactical connection, by L. T. Milic.--Irony in Eighteenth-Century fiction, by W. C. Booth.--The consistency of Johnson's style, by W. K. Wimsatt.--Syntax in Wordsworth's Prelude, by D. Davie.--Scott's linguistic vagaries, by E. M. W. Tillyard.--The language of the Victorians, by F. W. Bateson.--On Dickens, by W. A. Ward.--Dialect in the novels of Hardy and George Eliot, by P. Ingham.--The first paragraph of James's Ambassadors, by I. Watt.--The holy language of modernism, by D. Donoghue.

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