Modern English Literature: Its Blemishes and Defects |
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Page 69
... borrowed from the French . These have been adopted into the language , and are to be found in our dictionaries . 2. Theatrical and musical terms , which we have chiefly received from the Italians and French , and which are to be met ...
... borrowed from the French . These have been adopted into the language , and are to be found in our dictionaries . 2. Theatrical and musical terms , which we have chiefly received from the Italians and French , and which are to be met ...
Page 71
... borrow from their neighbours . Even when they do adopt a new word , they handle it with such rudeness and so disfigure its spelling , that its parent tongue would not know it again . They strip it by COMPOSITION . 71 Prevalence among ...
... borrow from their neighbours . Even when they do adopt a new word , they handle it with such rudeness and so disfigure its spelling , that its parent tongue would not know it again . They strip it by COMPOSITION . 71 Prevalence among ...
Page 73
... borrowing an expression which our Gallic friends originally stole from us . So much for the dislike of the French to foreign words and modes of expression . It is clear that , so far as language is concerned , they will have no ...
... borrowing an expression which our Gallic friends originally stole from us . So much for the dislike of the French to foreign words and modes of expression . It is clear that , so far as language is concerned , they will have no ...
Page 212
... borrowed thought or image should be a strik- ing one , and be peculiar to the writer from whom it is adopted . Plagiarism of this kind has been more or less prevalent in all ages ; and it -has become so common among the moderns , that ...
... borrowed thought or image should be a strik- ing one , and be peculiar to the writer from whom it is adopted . Plagiarism of this kind has been more or less prevalent in all ages ; and it -has become so common among the moderns , that ...
Page 211
... borrowing , instances will be found in writers even of the highest genius . But as themes and subjects are held to be common pro- perty , no one is accounted a plagiarist for the mere adoption of a subject or theme which has been ...
... borrowing , instances will be found in writers even of the highest genius . But as themes and subjects are held to be common pro- perty , no one is accounted a plagiarist for the mere adoption of a subject or theme which has been ...
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Common terms and phrases
adopted Alison ancient beautiful blunder borrowed Bulwer Lytton cant character Christopher North composition correct couplet Courchamps Criticism D'Israeli Dictionary England English English Language Essay Europe from Fall examples expression Fall of Napoleon fame foreign words French genius grammar Hazlitt historian History of Europe History of Greece Ibid illustrated imperfect tense inaccuracy infallibility instance Isaac D'Israeli Junius king L'Esprit language Latin Letters Literary Portraits Lord Byron Macaulay means mind modern morocco Napoleon nature notice noun numerous occurs original parenthesis passage passions phrase plagiarism Plates Pleasures plural poem poet poetical poetry political Pope popular Post 8vo preposition present pronoun prose quoted racter reader remarkable Robert Southey Roman sample Second Edition sense sentence sentiment singular Sir Bulwer Lytton Sir Walter Scott Southey speaking species Square crown 8vo style tense thing thought tion translation truth verb vols Woodcuts writer
Popular passages
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