American EnglishA.A. Knopf, 1921 - 375 pàgines |
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Resultats 1 - 5 de 28.
Pàgina 7
... IMPORTANT TREATISES 49 CHAPTER THREE EXOTIC AMERICANISMS 70 CHAPTER FOUR SOME REAL AMERICANISMS 224 CHAPTER FIVE MISUNDERSTOOD AND IMAGINARY AMERICANISMS 315 CHAPTER SIX THE BIBLIOGRAPHY of the SUBJECT 332 INDEX OF WORDS AND PHRASES 347 ...
... IMPORTANT TREATISES 49 CHAPTER THREE EXOTIC AMERICANISMS 70 CHAPTER FOUR SOME REAL AMERICANISMS 224 CHAPTER FIVE MISUNDERSTOOD AND IMAGINARY AMERICANISMS 315 CHAPTER SIX THE BIBLIOGRAPHY of the SUBJECT 332 INDEX OF WORDS AND PHRASES 347 ...
Pàgina 15
... importance to any deliverance of his on any topic relating to language , to show the value of his judgment on questions of grammar and style ( philology not being involved ) , as illustrating the importance that should be attached to ...
... importance to any deliverance of his on any topic relating to language , to show the value of his judgment on questions of grammar and style ( philology not being involved ) , as illustrating the importance that should be attached to ...
Pàgina 24
... important particu- lar that we have no dialects . " I never found any difficulty in understanding an American speaker , " writes the historian Freeman ; " but I have often found it difficult to understand a Northern - English speaker ...
... important particu- lar that we have no dialects . " I never found any difficulty in understanding an American speaker , " writes the historian Freeman ; " but I have often found it difficult to understand a Northern - English speaker ...
Pàgina 30
... important point — one must be careful not to draw the comparison only with the speech of well - bred English people . Have our rural and laboring classes anything to learn from the management of their voices by the peasantry of the ...
... important point — one must be careful not to draw the comparison only with the speech of well - bred English people . Have our rural and laboring classes anything to learn from the management of their voices by the peasantry of the ...
Pàgina 45
... important an authority as Henry J. Nicoll says " Landmarks of English Literature , " Introduction , page 18- " Every critic occasionally meets in with works of great fame of which he can- not appreciate the merit . " Beaconsfield writes ...
... important an authority as Henry J. Nicoll says " Landmarks of English Literature , " Introduction , page 18- " Every critic occasionally meets in with works of great fame of which he can- not appreciate the merit . " Beaconsfield writes ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
American English: A Paper Read Before the Albany Institute, June 6, 1882 ... Gilbert Milligan Tucker Visualització completa - 1883 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
15th Century Æneid Albany Amer Ameri AMERICAN LANGUAGE American speech animals blunder Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich BRANDER MATTHEWS Britain British citation British writers called certainly chap chapter Charlotte Brontë cheat Clapin clipping Davies Defined in Halliwell dialects Dickens Dictionary of Americanisms drink earliest known Edward Eggleston Elwyn England English Language Englishman error expression Farmer fellow fish French Gazette guess H. L. MENCKEN heard horse ican instance invented Jamieson Journal kind known appearance land Letters lish London Magazine meaning Murray gives citation negro never nonce word noun obsolete occurs old English one's origin party peculiar person political present Prof Promptorium Parvulorum pronunciation provincialism railroad Review Richard Grant White says Bartlett seems sense slang sort speak spelling street supposed term thing think older Thornton tion tree tury United verb Vocabulary vulgar Westminster Review words and phrases York
Passatges populars
Pàgina 70 - And his fame went throughout all Syria: and they brought unto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments, and those which were possessed with devils, and those which were lunatic, and those that had the palsy; and he healed them.
Pàgina 118 - And whether that my angel be turn'd fiend Suspect I may, yet not directly tell; But being both from me, both to each friend, I guess one angel in another's hell: Yet this shall I ne'er know, but live in doubt, Till my bad angel fire my good one out.
Pàgina 24 - In the first place, it will hardly be denied in any quarter that the speech of the United States is quite unlike that of Great Britain, in the important particular that here we have no dialects.
Pàgina 53 - Let the English remove the beam from their own eye, before they attempt to pull the mote from ours; and before they laugh at our vulgar keow, geown, neow, let them discard their polite keind, and geuide ; a fault precisely similar in origin, and equally a perversion of genuine English pronunciation.
Pàgina 29 - a remarkable fact that the English spoken in America is not only very pure, but also is spoken with equal purity by all classes. . . . The language in every man's mouth...
Pàgina 52 - I do not mean, that so great a deviation has taken place, as to have rendered any considerable part of our language unintelligible to Englishmen; but merely, that so many corruptions have crept into our English...
Pàgina 49 - Let us then, for a moment, imagine the time to have arrived, when Americans shall no longer be able to understand the works of Milton, Pope, Swift, Addison, and other English authors, justly styled classic, without the aid of a translation into a language that is to be called, at some future day, the American tongue ! By such a change, it is true, our loss would not be so great in works purely scientific, as in those which are usually termed works of taste ; for the obvious reason, that the design...
Pàgina 50 - ... various living languages. Nor is this the only view in which a radical change of language would be an evil. To say nothing of the facilities afforded by a common language in the ordinary intercourse of business, it should not be forgotten, that our religion and our laws are studied in the language of the nation, from which we are descended...
Pàgina 222 - ... special bright ; and by no means first-rate ; and not at all tonguey (or disposed for conversation) ; and that however rowdy you may be by natur', it does use you up com-plete, and that's a fact ; and makes you quake considerable, and disposed toe damn the engine ! — All of which phrases, I beg to add, are pure Americanisms of the first water.
Pàgina 13 - Letters," the English of which is not much worse than that of ninety-nine out of every hundred of his college-bred compatriots, will very soon become aware to what degree the art of writing our language has declined among educated Americans.