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Página 61
For example , on the first page , when Satya jealously examines Roop , the young wife who has supplanted her , Roop's skin is described as " smooth as a new apricot beckoning from the limb of a tall tree ...
For example , on the first page , when Satya jealously examines Roop , the young wife who has supplanted her , Roop's skin is described as " smooth as a new apricot beckoning from the limb of a tall tree ...
Página 168
... whether irony is necessarily echoic or not ; third , whether relevance can account for some of the instances of irony described by Sperber and Wilson ( 1998 ) as non - echoic or nonostensive ; and fourth , some possible applications ...
... whether irony is necessarily echoic or not ; third , whether relevance can account for some of the instances of irony described by Sperber and Wilson ( 1998 ) as non - echoic or nonostensive ; and fourth , some possible applications ...
Página 104
obviously when the mountains which mark the entry to Kukuanaland are called “ Sheba's breasts , ” and described by Quatermain as being [ ... ] shaped exactly like a woman's breasts . Their bases swelled gently up from the plain ...
obviously when the mountains which mark the entry to Kukuanaland are called “ Sheba's breasts , ” and described by Quatermain as being [ ... ] shaped exactly like a woman's breasts . Their bases swelled gently up from the plain ...
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 1 |
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American analysis anthologies appears attempt authority becomes Bertha Black body British called characters child colonial communication concern construction context create critical cultural death described desire discourse dream English experience fact female feminist fiction figure hand human identity images imagination important Indian individual interpretation irony Italy Jane John kind knowledge language literary literature live London look meaning memory moral myth narrative narrator native nature never notes notion novel Orient past person perspective play poetics poetry political position possible present published question reader reading reality reason reference relation relationship relevance represents response role sense sexual slave slavery social society space Sperber story structure suggests tells theory things traditional Travels understanding University Utopia utterance voice Western Wilson woman women writing York young