10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ANTISTROPHON»
Discover the use of
antistrophon in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
antistrophon and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Dictionary of English and Bengalee: Tr. from Todd's Ed. of ...
প্রছুধানপুরোহিত, শ্রেষ্ঠাচার্য] | Antistmphe, n. s. Gr. চরণ ২ গর্সতব্য গাঁট্টতট্টত
ঢরণত্রয়ের মধে] বা চরণদ্ধয়ের মধ্যে দ্বির্তীয় চরণ | Antistrophon, n. s. পুনঃ২ একই শব্দ
ব্যবহ্যার্যা রূপককাক্য | Antistrumatick, a. Gr. and Lat. ঘাড়মাপ্তরা (রাগনশেক, বাষি
...
Samuel Johnson, Henry John Todd, Ramcomul Sen, 1834
2
A new universal etymological technological, and pronouncing ...
Antistrophon, an-tis'tro-fon, s. (anlixtroplie, Lat) A figure which repeats a word
frequently. Antistrumatic, an-te-stru-mat'ik, *. (anti, and struma, a scrofulous
swelling.) Applied to a medicine used in scrofula. — Not used. I prescribed him a
difttilled ...
John Craig (F.G.S.), 1859
3
A Dictionary in English and Bengalee; Translated from Todd's ...
CH$TFI§'I I Antistropbe, n. s. Gr. চরণ২ গর্সতব্য গাঁট্টতর্টুত ঢরণত্রর্টুয়র মর্টুধ্য 21
চরণদ্ধয়ের মধ্যে দ্বির্তায় চরণ ৷ Antistrophon, n. s. পৃন'৪২ একই শব্দ ব]ষহর্যর্য]
রূপকষ্কাক] I Antistrurnatick, a. Gr. and Lat. YIT<$$I18?II (§1€ITI"I$, বাযি
হরগেজরোণবিশেষ ...
4
The prose works of John Milton
Now that he may know what it is to be a child, and yet to meddle with edged tools,
I turn his antistrophon upon hn own head ; the confuter knows that these things
are the furniture of playhouses and bordelloes; therefore by the same reason ...
5
Autobiography: Or, Milton's Life in His Own Words
that he may know what it is to be a child, and yet to meddle with edged tools, I
turn his antistrophon upon his own head : the Confuter knows that these things
are the furniture of such places, therefore, by the same reason, the Confuter hath
...
John Milton, James J. G. Graham, 1872
6
An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language
Antistrophe, in grammar, the changing of things mutually depending on each
other ; reciprocal conversion ;— as, the master of the servant ; the servant of the
master. $ Antistrophon, a figure which repeats a word often. II Apostrophe, in
rhetoric, ...
John Oswald, John Miller Keagy, 1840
7
Popular and Complete English Dictionary: Exhibiting the ...
... the changing of things mutually depending on each other; reciprocal
conversion. Among the ancients, that part of a song or dance, before the altar,
which was performed by turning from west to east, in opposition to the strophe.
Antistrophon ...
8
An Examination of Plato's Doctrines Vol 2 (RLE: Plato): ...
He then says that motion has many forms, two of which are obvious, namely the
motion of the stars and that which corresponds to it (antistrophon). This he
explains by saying that as eyes are adapted to astronomy, so ears are to
harmonious ...
9
Sextus Empiricus: Against the Logicians
(6) For Aristotle says that Empedocles got rhetoric started, of which dialectic is a “
counterpart” [antistrophon]3 — that is, correlated with it [isostrophon], because of
being related to the same material, just as the poet called Odysseus “godlike” ...
Sextus (Empiricus.), Richard Arnot Home Bett, 2005
10
The Art of Dialectic Between Dialogue and Rhetoric: The ...
Firstly, I shall refer to Renaissance commentaries on the opening sentence of
Aristotle's Rhetoric, where Aristotle writes that “rhetoric is a counterpart ('
antistrophon') of dialectic”.178 Rather strikingly, one of the major sources which
is quoted ...