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This study describes the usage of subclauses and participial clauses in Xenophon’s Hellenica and Anabasis , with additional examples from other texts, using a text grammar-oriented approach, which can map more factors underlying the distribution of these clauses, and offers a more satisfactory explanation of a larger number of instances than is possible using the traditional sentence-level approach. The discourse-analytic description of the different clause types focuses on how relations are coded by means of subordinating conjunctions, the differences in form and function as discourse boundary markers between preposed, sentence-initially placed subclauses and participles, and the differences between clause types with respect to the information flow in on-going discourse. The discussion of many examples from the work of Xenophon makes this book interesting for both linguists and classical philologists.
Greek language --- Discourse analysis, Narrative --- Grec (Langue) --- Discours narratif --- Clauses. --- Propositions --- Xenophon. --- Clauses --- Narration (Rhetoric) --- Rhetoric, Ancient --- Ancient rhetoric --- Classical languages --- Greek rhetoric --- Latin language --- Latin rhetoric --- Indo-European languages --- Classical philology --- Greek philology --- History --- Rhetoric --- Xenophon --- Xenofon --- Xenofoon --- Xenophoon --- Senofonte --- Language. --- a Xenophon --- Jenofonte --- Jenófanes --- Ksenofont --- Xenofón --- Kısenofon --- Pseudo-Senofonte --- Kʻsenopʻonti --- Pseudo-Xenophon --- כסינופון --- زينوفون --- كزنوفون --- گزنفون --- Xenofont --- Ξενοφῶν --- Rhetoric, Ancient. --- Narratees (Rhetoric) --- Xenophon. - Hellenica --- Xenophon. - Anabasis
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This study describes the usage of subclauses and participial clauses in Xenophon’s Hellenica and Anabasis , with additional examples from other texts, using a text grammar-oriented approach, which can map more factors underlying the distribution of these clauses, and offers a more satisfactory explanation of a larger number of instances than is possible using the traditional sentence-level approach. The discourse-analytic description of the different clause types focuses on how relations are coded by means of subordinating conjunctions, the differences in form and function as discourse boundary markers between preposed, sentence-initially placed subclauses and participles, and the differences between clause types with respect to the information flow in on-going discourse. The discussion of many examples from the work of Xenophon makes this book interesting for both linguists and classical philologists.
Greek language --- Narration (Rhetoric) --- Rhetoric, Ancient. --- Language and languages. --- Ancient rhetoric --- Classical languages --- Greek rhetoric --- Latin language --- Latin rhetoric --- Indo-European languages --- Classical philology --- Greek philology --- Narrative (Rhetoric) --- Narrative writing --- Rhetoric --- Discourse analysis, Narrative --- Narratees (Rhetoric) --- Foreign languages --- Languages --- Anthropology --- Communication --- Ethnology --- Information theory --- Meaning (Psychology) --- Philology --- Linguistics --- Clauses. --- History --- Xenophon. --- Xenophon --- a Xenophon --- Xenofon --- Xenofoon --- Xenophoon --- Jenofonte --- Jenófanes --- Ksenofont --- Xenofón --- Senofonte --- Kısenofon --- Pseudo-Senofonte --- Kʻsenopʻonti --- Pseudo-Xenophon --- כסינופון --- زينوفون --- كزنوفون --- گزنفون --- Xenofont --- Ξενοφῶν --- Language. --- Anabasis (Xenophon) --- Hellenica (Xenophon) --- Hellēnika (Xenophon) --- Historia Graeca (Xenophon) --- De rebus Graecorum (Xenophon) --- Xenophōntos Hellēnika (Xenophon) --- Xenophontis Historia Graeca (Xenophon) --- Expeditio Cyri (Xenophon) --- Kyrou anabasis (Xenophon) --- De Cyri expeditione (Xenophon) --- De Cyri minoris expeditione (Xenophon) --- Xenophōntos Kyrou anabasis (Xenophon) --- Xenophontis Expeditio Cyri (Xenophon) --- To 1500 --- Greek language - Clauses --- Xenophon. - Hellenica --- Xenophon. - Anabasis
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This volume is a collection of papers revealing the largely unexplored boundary between linguistic and literary approaches to classical texts. Eleven contributions by various scholars discuss a wide range of linguistic and literary aspects of classical texts: the narratee in the prologues of Sophocles’ Trachiniae and of Euripides, the chronology in Pindar’s Odes, the relation between tense-aspect and Discourse Modes in Thucydides, Xenophon, Vergil and Ovid, the use of aspect in the Law Code of Gortyn, expressions of futurity and the word order of adjectives in Herodotus, and, finally, ancient and modern views on word order. Following an interdisciplinary approach, all contributions aim at bridging the gap between linguistic and literary study of classical texts.
Greek literature --- Latin literature --- Greek language --- Latin language --- Criticism, Textual. --- History and criticism. --- Word order. --- Style. --- Klassieke talen. --- Filologie. --- Criticism, Textual --- History and criticism --- Word order --- Style --- Classical languages --- Classical literature --- Indo-European languages --- Classical philology --- Greek philology --- Greek literature - Criticism, Textual. --- Latin literature - Criticism, Textual. --- Greek literature - History and criticism. --- Latin literature - History and criticism. --- Greek language - Word order. --- Latin language - Word order. --- Greek language - Style. --- Latin language - Style. --- Grec (langue) --- Latin (langue) --- Littérature grecque --- Littérature latine --- Histoire et critique
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