Prose: Difference between revisions
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The term is applied to all forms of written or spoken expression which do not have a regular rhythmic pattern. The word derives from "Latin Prosa or proversa oratio, 'straight forward discourse'" (Cuddon 705). Holman states "that while prose is like verse in that good prose has a rhythm, it is unlike verse in that this rhythm is not to be scanned by any of the normal metrical schemes" (382). | "The term is applied to all forms of written or spoken expression which do not have a regular rhythmic pattern". The word derives from "Latin Prosa or proversa oratio, 'straight forward discourse'" (Cuddon 705). Holman states "that while prose is like verse in that good prose has a rhythm, it is unlike verse in that this rhythm is not to be scanned by any of the normal metrical schemes" (382). | ||
An example of a prose is "Homeric epic" (Fowler 191). | An example of a prose is "Homeric epic" (Fowler 191). |
Latest revision as of 08:14, 27 September 2006
"The term is applied to all forms of written or spoken expression which do not have a regular rhythmic pattern". The word derives from "Latin Prosa or proversa oratio, 'straight forward discourse'" (Cuddon 705). Holman states "that while prose is like verse in that good prose has a rhythm, it is unlike verse in that this rhythm is not to be scanned by any of the normal metrical schemes" (382).
An example of a prose is "Homeric epic" (Fowler 191).
Work Cited
Holman, Hugh C. A Handbook To Literature. New York: The Odyssey Press, 1936.
Cudden, J. A. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Fourth Edition. Great Britain, Penguin Group, 1977.
Fowler, Roger. A Dictionary of Modern Critical Terms. London and New York: Routledge, 1987.