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  2. Thomas Carlyle's prose style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle's_prose_style

    Carlylese is a noun that describes the unique prose style of Thomas Carlyle, a 19th-century Scottish writer and historian. Carlyle's style is characterised by poetic rhapsody, metaphor, neologisms, and allusions to various sources, such as the Bible, Shakespeare, and Goethe.

  3. John Banville - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Banville

    John Banville is an Irish novelist, short story writer, adapter of dramas and screenwriter. He has won several literary awards, including the Booker Prize for The Sea, and publishes crime novels as Benjamin Black.

  4. Stylistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stylistics

    Stylistics is the study and interpretation of texts and spoken language in regard to their linguistic and tonal style. It links literary criticism to linguistics and covers various topics such as genre, register, foregrounding, and poetic function.

  5. English writing style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_writing_style

    An English writing style is a combination of features in an English language composition that has become characteristic of a particular writer, a genre, a particular organization, or a profession more broadly (e.g., legal writing).

  6. Zooming (writing skill) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zooming_(writing_skill)

    Zooming is a writing skill, as outlined in secondary education, [1] that gives the reader the feeling of moving through space towards or away from a character or object, especially used in descriptive writing. It can be divided into two types: zooming in and zooming out.

  7. Elocution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elocution

    Elocution is the study and practice of effective speech and its forms, based on pronunciation, grammar, style, and tone. Learn about the origins, development, and methods of elocution in Western rhetoric, from ancient Greece to modern times.

  8. Writing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Writing

    Writing is the act of creating a persistent representation of human language using symbols and rules. Learn about the origins, functions, and characteristics of different writing systems, from hieroglyphs to digital text, and how they shape human culture and cognition.

  9. Translation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translation

    Translation is the communication of the meaning of a source-language text by means of an equivalent target-language text. [1] The English language draws a terminological distinction (which does not exist in every language) between translating (a written text) and interpreting (oral or signed communication between users of different languages ...