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Hiatt, Mary P. – 1975
Based on an extensive computer-aided examination of representative published American writing, this book examines and compares how various kinds of prose employ the diverse forms of parallelism. A scale of rhetorical value for assessing the cooccurring rhetorical devices of repetition is also presented. The chapters are entitled: "Balance or…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Literary Styles, Literature Reviews, Parallelism (Literary)

Walker, Robert L. – College Composition and Communication, 1970
Report of an analysis of the prose of five British and five American authors which seems to refute Francis Christensen's contention that the cumulative sentence" is the typical sentence of modern English." (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Authors, English Instruction, Language Patterns, Language Research
O'DONNELL, BERNARD – 1966
THE PURPOSE OF THIS ANALYSIS WAS TO DISCOVER CERTAIN ASPECTS OF STYLE (BOTH LEXICAL AND GRAMMATICAL) WHICH COULD BE COUNTED AND WHICH WOULD, WHEN COMPARED, DIFFERENTIATE BETWEEN THE WRITTEN PROSE OF TWO AUTHORS. THE SUBJECT SELECTED FOR ANALYSIS WAS "THE O'RUDDY," BEGUN BY STEPHEN CRANE AND COMPLETED BY ROBERT BARR. SINCE THERE WAS NO…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Data Processing, Diction, Discriminant Analysis
Keneally, Tom – Opinion, The Journal of the South Australian English Teachers' Assn., 1967
The practicing writer encounters four determinants of his use of prose. First, the language itself determines the expression: English, with its wealth of words and styles and with few traditional restrictions, provides problems of choice and temptations to overwrite. Second, the application of verse forms to the novel and a demand for consistently…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing, Expressive Language, Language
Turner, G. W. – Opinion, The Journal of the South Australian English Teacher's Assn., 1967
A delineation of the differences between speaking and writing should clarify the functions and possible future of prose. Speech has a speaker to provide language with inflectional stress and a visible audience to respond immediately to that language. On the other hand, prose ("an art of written language")--which is separated in time from an…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm
Hinkel, Eli – Language Teaching Research, 2004
This study analyses specific written discourse production in which NNSs' usage of English tenses and voice appears to be dramatically different from that of NSs. The data for the study narrowly focuses on a small number of verb phrase features, such as tenses, aspects and the passive voice, examining how they are presented in writing instruction…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Verbs, Morphemes