Showing 12,621 - 12,630 results of 12,630 for search '"rhetoric"', query time: 0.20s Refine Results
  1. 12621

    Imagery and meaning creation of Azerbaijani school poets with stringed instruments by Mohammad Parsanasab, Masoud Moazami Goodarzi

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…In terms of comparison, Mojir Beilaqani's poem is somewhat close to Khaqani's from an aesthetic point of view, but the verses of Nizami have more of a narrative aspect and are devoid of significant rhetorical beauty. Among all the poems of the researched poets, only one verse of Mojir Beilaqani can be used to imagine a type of musical instrument from the word "Zir". …”
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  2. 12622

    comparative study of Saadi's Gulistan and Yoshida's Essays in Idleness by Gholamreza Kafi, Mohammad Barfar

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…Even so, Sa’adi’ s work, is far superior to Yoshida’s, from an aesthetic and rhetorical point of view. Warning about the instability of the world, the preciousness of contentment and importance of dignity in the old age are the common themes of two books. …”
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  3. 12623

    The structure and doctrine of the path of praxis (Muʿāmala) of the Iḥyāʾ ʿUlūm al-Dīn: The integration of reason and revelation in al-Ghazālī’s revival project by Styer, S

    Published 2021
    “…Showing how, even at his most philosophical, that al-Ghazālī is not only waxing rhetorical, but synthesising and accommodating, requires discipline and an ear for more than one subject or discourse. …”
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  4. 12624

    Simon V of Montfort: The exercise and aims of independent Baronial power at home and on crusade, 1195-1218 by Lippiatt, G

    Published 2015
    “…</p> <p>Such independence, however, required alternative bases for his own power that could not be found in the largely rhetorical refuge offered by a distant overlord. In the absence of support from above, Simon worked to cultivate relationships with his social peers and the lesser French nobility. …”
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  5. 12625

    The response to Horace in the seventeenth century by Martindale, J, Martindale, Joanna

    Published 1977
    “…Thirdly, his close, craftsmanly, rhetorical interest in Horace is described, with reference to his underlinings in Parthenio's commentary, his translations of Horace and his imitations of Horatian features of style in <em>An Ode</em>. …”
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  6. 12626

    Intertextuality as a source of discourse emotionalization and language innovations by Oleksandr Levko, Nataliia Kramar

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…Discourse and Discrimination: Rhetorics of Racism and Antisemitism. London, New York: Routledge [in English]. …”
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  7. 12627
  8. 12628

    Factors Affecting the Change in the Strategies of Sweden Democrat Party Behavior by Reza Rahmati

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…An issue that has led to a significant increase in the level of social and economic inequality in this country, and finally, the feeling of inequality has caused a break in the main idea of "the people's home".At the same time when this break was created, the most important political force to take advantage of this situation was the political force that rhetorically opposed the Social Democratic Party's inability to protect the "people's home". …”
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  9. 12629

    Has Frye ignored ethos in ethical criticism? by Marjan Hosseinpoor Jeerhandeh, Omid Zakerikish, Masoud Algooneh Juneghani

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…In line with this division on the question of type or genre, and in contrast to the question of style, and also to achieve the ideal of a poetic design that is comprehensive and includes all valid criticism, he divides four categories of mood, symbol, archetype, and genre in his book "Anatomy of Criticism," under the separate four articles of historical criticism, ethical criticism, archetypal criticism, and rhetorical criticism. He, who deals with "Ethical Criticism" in the second article of the book by promising that literature consists of interwoven stages and the work draws its totality from this interwovenness of stages, distinguishes between mythos, ethos, and dianoia (see Frye, 1998: 93). …”
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  10. 12630

    Professional Volunteers by Sebastian Agredo

    Published 2014-03-01
    “…Using a series of “rhetorical moves” – much like the ones employed by the egg donation and IVF industry –pharmaceutical companies use the term “paid volunteers,” defined as those who, “receive financial compensation for time and travel expenses” to describe the guinea pigs.[23] This kind of language puts great stress and emphasis on the fact that the research subjects voluntarily enroll in the trials, which relieves pharmaceutical companies of any responsibility for the risks involved. …”
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