Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 93 |
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Page 105
... seems usually to be semantically redundant . In ( 38 ) , for example , the first sentence contains a contrast between Atticus , the subject of defendis , and Cicero , who refers to himself by means of the contrastive use of ego . But in ...
... seems usually to be semantically redundant . In ( 38 ) , for example , the first sentence contains a contrast between Atticus , the subject of defendis , and Cicero , who refers to himself by means of the contrastive use of ego . But in ...
Page 129
... seems to be emphatic , whereas in ( 124 ) the focus seems rather to be on sperare . But there can be no doubt that the pattern represented in ( 124 ) had its origin in the spoken language , rather than in a contrived form of poetic ...
... seems to be emphatic , whereas in ( 124 ) the focus seems rather to be on sperare . But there can be no doubt that the pattern represented in ( 124 ) had its origin in the spoken language , rather than in a contrived form of poetic ...
Page 266
... seems likely , however , that this pattern ( if it is not simply modelled on Greek ' anastrophe ' of prepositions ) is based on the type S - P - As ( rebus in arduis ) , where the preposition is inserted between the noun and the ...
... seems likely , however , that this pattern ( if it is not simply modelled on Greek ' anastrophe ' of prepositions ) is based on the type S - P - As ( rebus in arduis ) , where the preposition is inserted between the noun and the ...
Contents
Poetic Diction Poetic Discourse and the Poetic Register | 21 |
Nominative Personal Pronouns and Some Patterns of Speech | 97 |
The Word Order of Horaces Odes | 135 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Adams adjective Aeneid aequora alliteration archaic archaism atque attested Augustan Augustan poetry Cato Catull Catullus Cels Celsus cent Cicero classical clause Coleman colloquial comedy context contrast discussion early Latin effect elegy emphasis emphatic Ennius epic epigrams examples expression feature figure genitive genres Graeca grecism Greek Greek words haec Homeric Horace Horace's hyperbaton instance item 11 Jocelyn Juvenal Juvenal's language Latin language Latin poetry lexical linguistic literary Livy Lucan Lucilius Lucr Lucretius lyric metaphor metrical mihi noun occurs Odes ordinary Ovid Ovid's parody passage pattern Phalaecian epigrams phrase Plaut poem poetic register poets pronoun Prop Propertius Pyrrha quae quid Quintilian quod reference remis Roman satire Saturae seems semantic sense Servius speech style stylistic syntactical syntax technical tibi Tibullus tone usage Varro verb verse Virg Virgil vocabulary Vulgar Latin word order