Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 121 |
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Page 126
... sound and the meaning of a word . ' But this thoroughgoing insistence is modified , irreparably albeit evasively ... sounds that suggest them each in turn is anything more than arbitrary or purely fortuitous . '36 ' Hardly an instance ...
... sound and the meaning of a word . ' But this thoroughgoing insistence is modified , irreparably albeit evasively ... sounds that suggest them each in turn is anything more than arbitrary or purely fortuitous . '36 ' Hardly an instance ...
Page 138
... sound , ' in the Conclusion ' of the line , in Sonnet 89 : ' knowing thy wil , / I will acquaintance strangle and looke strange ' . How it looks is different from how it sounds , the hard g against the soft . Shakespeare's intimations ...
... sound , ' in the Conclusion ' of the line , in Sonnet 89 : ' knowing thy wil , / I will acquaintance strangle and looke strange ' . How it looks is different from how it sounds , the hard g against the soft . Shakespeare's intimations ...
Page 143
... sound and syntax , with sound and sight at one , is then further confirmed by the old spelling as it is not by the modernising to ' compass ' , for it is only if we grant compasse its final e that the words can perfectly encompass ...
... sound and syntax , with sound and sight at one , is then further confirmed by the old spelling as it is not by the modernising to ' compass ' , for it is only if we grant compasse its final e that the words can perfectly encompass ...
Contents
The Origins of the Civilisation of Angkor | 41 |
Yorkshire Writers | 91 |
Shakespeare and the Anagram | 111 |
Copyright | |
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