High School English, Book 4Macmillan, 1936 - English language |
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Page 149
... interest . Creative narration , therefore , may sacrifice chronology to interest . Sometimes it is well to start a narrative in the mid- - dle , where events are most lively and striking NARRATION 149 ― STORY - TELLING Creative Narrative.
... interest . Creative narration , therefore , may sacrifice chronology to interest . Sometimes it is well to start a narrative in the mid- - dle , where events are most lively and striking NARRATION 149 ― STORY - TELLING Creative Narrative.
Page 150
... interest , or epochal moments in a narrative , are steps of sus- pense . When these increasingly sustained moments of in- terest reach their greatest intensity when the bubble has reached the instant of highest inflation then the ...
... interest , or epochal moments in a narrative , are steps of sus- pense . When these increasingly sustained moments of in- terest reach their greatest intensity when the bubble has reached the instant of highest inflation then the ...
Page 208
... interest of the audience . 4. Arguments that make use of vision and interrogation and human - interest . B. Arguments of exhaustive detail I. 2 . 3 . 4 . 5 . 6 . 7 . 8 . 9 . IO . II . 12 . 13 . 14 . All the accumulated arguments of fact ...
... interest of the audience . 4. Arguments that make use of vision and interrogation and human - interest . B. Arguments of exhaustive detail I. 2 . 3 . 4 . 5 . 6 . 7 . 8 . 9 . IO . II . 12 . 13 . 14 . All the accumulated arguments of fact ...
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Common terms and phrases
adjective adverb ALEXANDER WILLIAM KINGLAKE American argument Arthur Guiterman asked beauty called carpels Centertown Chev clauses club confuse Correct debate definite EDGAR ALLAN POE Edgar Lee Masters English essay Examples exposition expression FANNIE HURST father feel form of discourse formal Gerald give hand high school interest John kind learned letter look Louis Untermeyer loved Macmillan Company Mary ment modify mother narration narrative Nathaniel Hawthorne never NOTE noun object outline participle permission person phrase picture Plan and write plural poem poet poetry point of view PRACTICE preposition present pronoun question Refers rhythm Robert Louis Stevenson SARA TEASDALE sense sentence singular speak speaker speech story talk tell tense things thou thought tion toast vote William Rose Benét wish word wrong