Proceedings of the British Academy, Svazek 82British Academy, 1993 - Počet stran: 524 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 38
Strana 248
... suffering . He uses the word ' comfort ' and its derivatives more than two hundred times in his plays ( compared to only three uses of ' consolation ' ) , a preference that probably reflects the relative popularity of those words in the ...
... suffering . He uses the word ' comfort ' and its derivatives more than two hundred times in his plays ( compared to only three uses of ' consolation ' ) , a preference that probably reflects the relative popularity of those words in the ...
Strana 255
... suffering which utters words that actually cancel comfort . Such responses reverse the normal consolatio structure , where the consolandus is comforted for a suffering that is no fault of theirs , having been caused either by nature or ...
... suffering which utters words that actually cancel comfort . Such responses reverse the normal consolatio structure , where the consolandus is comforted for a suffering that is no fault of theirs , having been caused either by nature or ...
Strana 257
... suffering with another can lead to a crazy egoism . In Book Three of the Tusculans Cicero reported the view of Carneades ( disagreeing with it , of course ) that ' as for that kinde of comfort whych cometh of the rehearsall of others ...
... suffering with another can lead to a crazy egoism . In Book Three of the Tusculans Cicero reported the view of Carneades ( disagreeing with it , of course ) that ' as for that kinde of comfort whych cometh of the rehearsall of others ...
Obsah
Lectures | 1 |
The Genetics of Celtic Populations | 37 |
An Essay on Survival | 59 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 19 nejsou zobrazeny.
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
Academy Alan American Anaxarchus Anglo-Saxon appeared argument Aurignacian become British called Cambridge cent century Christian concerning consolatio consolation continued cultural death discussion distribution early economic effect England Europe evidence example fact Figure followed friends further German give given human important income industries inequality influence interest Italy language later Latin least lectures less linguistic living London major means namely nature never Observer Old English original Oxford particular perhaps period person philosophical political populations possible present problems published question Rabelais reason recent relation relatively remains Review seems sense Smith social society sources success suffering suggested Taylor theory tradition United University whole writing wrote