Convention: Difference between revisions

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"A pattern (for instance, the 14-line poem, or sonnet) or motif (for instance, the bumbling police officer in detective fiction) or other device occurring so often that it is taken for granted.  Thus it is a convention that actors in a performance of ''Julius Caesar'' are understood to be speaking Latin, though in fact they are speaking EngishSimilarly, the soliloquy (a character alone on the stage speaks his or her thoughts aloud) is a convention, for in real life sane people do not talk aloud to themselves." (Literature for Composition, 1074).
A pattern that occurs so often that it is not noticed, like a sonnet or motifWhen a character speaks aloud what he is thinking is also considered a convention. (Literature for Composition, 1074).

Latest revision as of 21:41, 25 April 2005

A pattern that occurs so often that it is not noticed, like a sonnet or motif. When a character speaks aloud what he is thinking is also considered a convention. (Literature for Composition, 1074).