Aspects of the Language of Latin ProseTobias Reinhardt, Michael Lapidge, J. N. Adams OUP/British Academy, 24 nov 2005 - 450 pagine Twenty articles from two often dissociated areas of Latin studies, classical and medieval Latin, examine continuities and developments in the language of Latin prose from its emergence to the twelfth century. Language is not understood in a narrowly philological or linguistic sense, but as encompassing the literary exploitation of linguistic effects and the influence of formal rhetoric on prose. Key themes explored throughout the volume are the use of poetic diction in prose, archaism, sentence structure, and bilingualism. Papers cover a comprehensive range of material including studies of individual works, groups of authors such as the Republican historians, prose genres such as the ancient novel or medieval biography, and linguistic topics such as the use of connectives in archaic Latin or prose rhythm in medieval Latin. The diversity of approaches displayed from an international array of experts will make this an essential resource for all those interested in Latin language and literature. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 60
Pagina 154
... arguments serves further to address the issue , but the basic point is clear enough . A second argument typically levelled against atomism is that it relies in a counter - intuitive fashion on the notion of chance . We have to ...
... arguments serves further to address the issue , but the basic point is clear enough . A second argument typically levelled against atomism is that it relies in a counter - intuitive fashion on the notion of chance . We have to ...
Pagina 164
... argument that there are atoms ; the more strident tone which prevailed for most of the paragraph is replaced by cool and rational argument . Cotta maintains the connection with what came before by using indiuiduum as a noun ( it was an ...
... argument that there are atoms ; the more strident tone which prevailed for most of the paragraph is replaced by cool and rational argument . Cotta maintains the connection with what came before by using indiuiduum as a noun ( it was an ...
Pagina 167
... argument first to advance an implausible claim and then , when criticism occurs , to follow it up with an outrageously implausible second argument . The passage I quote above is meant to be an instance of this argument pattern : the ...
... argument first to advance an implausible claim and then , when criticism occurs , to follow it up with an outrageously implausible second argument . The passage I quote above is meant to be an instance of this argument pattern : the ...
Sommario
Connections in Archaic Latin Prose | 37 |
The Language and Style of the Fragmentary Republican Historians 53 | 53 |
The Bellum Africum | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Aspects of the Language of Latin Prose Tobias Reinhardt,Michael Lapidge,J. N. Adams Anteprima limitata - 2005 |
Parole e frasi comuni
adjectives Aldhelm anacoluthon ancient Apuleius archaic archaism asyndeton atoms atomus atque autem Bede Bede's Bellum Africum British Academy Caesar Cato Cicero Ciceronian cited classical clause clausulae colloquial commentary construction context corpus cursus discussion earlier eius enim Ennius Epicurean Epicurus esto etiam example Gellius genre Gesta Greek Gregory haec indiuidua instance Latin prose law code Lebek linguistic literary literature Livy Lucretius manuscripts medieval Latin Michael Winterbottom nominative noun occurs orat Oxford passage period philosophical phrase Plautus Plin Pliny Pliny the Elder plural poetic poetry praef quae quam quidem Quintilian quod rerum rhetorical Roman Seneca Seneca's prose sense sentence siue speech style stylistic sunt syntax Tacitus technical languages translation Twelve Tables usage Varro verb Vergil verse vocabulary William of Malmesbury words writing
Riferimenti a questo libro
The Blackwell History of the Latin Language James Clackson,Geoffrey Horrocks Visualizzazione estratti - 2007 |