Anglica, Volumes 5-61962 - English philology |
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Page 69
... fair is foul , and foul is fair . " This obviously means that the fair ( of the human world ) is the foul ( of the world of the witches ) and vice versa . But when the ( 17 ) John Lawlor : The Tragic Sense in Shakespeare , London , 1960 ...
... fair is foul , and foul is fair . " This obviously means that the fair ( of the human world ) is the foul ( of the world of the witches ) and vice versa . But when the ( 17 ) John Lawlor : The Tragic Sense in Shakespeare , London , 1960 ...
Page 70
... fair a day I have not seen " ( I. iii . 38 ) and it indicates that he is already under the spell of the evil powers . " So foul " is ' so foul weather ' and " fair a day " is Holinshed's 66 so fair a day " and means ' his day of victory ...
... fair a day I have not seen " ( I. iii . 38 ) and it indicates that he is already under the spell of the evil powers . " So foul " is ' so foul weather ' and " fair a day " is Holinshed's 66 so fair a day " and means ' his day of victory ...
Page 20
... fair ( Mand . , p . 143 ) / with a strong wall & a fair ( Mand . , p . 185 ) / gentil men and noble ( Trevisa ; Müllner , p . 61 ) / she was called a fair lady and a passynge wyse ( Malory ; Vinaver , I , p . 7 ) The following ME ...
... fair ( Mand . , p . 143 ) / with a strong wall & a fair ( Mand . , p . 185 ) / gentil men and noble ( Trevisa ; Müllner , p . 61 ) / she was called a fair lady and a passynge wyse ( Malory ; Vinaver , I , p . 7 ) The following ME ...
Contents
The Auxiliary Do In John Drydens Plays Keitaro Irie | 1 |
The Language of The Spectator | 20 |
藤木白鳳 | 63 |
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Common terms and phrases
adjectives appear authors blood Caesar called cause century character combinations comes common course death dialects Dictionary effect Elizabethan English examples expressed eyes fact fair Falstaff Fielding function give given Hamlet hand honour human instance Johnson kind King language Lear less letter lines linguistic live look Macbeth main clause marker meaning MICHIGAN mind moral nature never noun object once original Othello passage period person phrase play poetry present prose question reason reference relation relative relative clause scene seems seen sense sentence Shakespeare shows simple sometimes speak Spectator speech stand structure sub-clause thing thou thought Troilus turn University verb verse whole words writing