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ii...
Context, Social Groups and Environmental Issues
iii...
Distribution and Communication
iv...
Textual Forms, Modes, and Subgenres
- Found in paragraph 5: (...) evices, among which metaphor is clearly the most (...)
- Found in paragraph 9: (...)
Allegory 2, metaphora continua
An exten (...)
- Found in paragraph 12: (...)
Metaphor
An implied compari (...)
- Found in item 6: (...) use (Sylvia Plath, “Metaphors”, v. 1, Plath 1971 (...)
- Found in paragraph 44: (...) s European style of Romanticism, some characteristi (...)
- Found in paragraph 51: (...) , see ), pointed to metaphor as the fundamental (...)
- Found in paragraph 54: (...) s typical of French Romanticism. By modern standard (...)
- Found in paragraph 56: (...) Romanticism: Romantic poetry in (...)
- Found in paragraph 57: (...) Symbolism: After Romanticism and in the wake of (...)
- Found in paragraph 61: (...) d commonly known as Romanticism. Romanticism saw th (...)
- Found in paragraph 62: (...) 131), in his essay “Romanticism and Classicism” (19 (...)
- Found in paragraph 70: (...) al, sometimes gaudy metaphors and an unconventio (...)
- Found in paragraph 73: (...) s, ‘juicy’ and bold metaphors, conceits (concett (...)
- Found in paragraph 76: (...) ed a unique form of romanticism, combining an outst (...)
- Found in paragraph 83: (...) n of Classicism and Romanticism. He consummated the (...)
- Found in paragraph 84: (...) tuated between late Romanticism and a lyric Realism (...)
- Found in paragraph 89: (...) her realisation of metaphors and comparisons. A (...)
- Found in paragraph 98: (...) by pointing to the metaphorical character of po (...)