adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a literary award
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The book was nominated for a major US literary award.
a literary critic (= of books and other literature )
a literary essay
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In a literary essay, you should explore the meaning and construction of the text.
a literary festival
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the Cheltenham Literary Festival.
academic/political/literary etc circles
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There has been a lot of debate about this issue in political circles.
art/literary/military etc historian
cultural/architectural/literary etc heritage
▪
the cultural heritage of Italy
literary agent
▪
a literary agent
literary merit (= the qualities that make something good as a book, play, or poem )
▪
There was no literary merit in his poems.
Literary texts
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Literary texts , like all other works of art, have a historical context.
literary/classical/cultural etc allusions
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Eliot’s poetry is full of biblical allusions.
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In his poetry we find many allusions to the human body.
musical/artistic/literary etc bent
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readers of a more literary bent
musical/literary/artistic taste
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His musical tastes changed radically.
poetic/literary expression (= expressing something as poetry or in literature )
▪
The subject does not easily lend itself to poetic expression.
the literary scene
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He had a huge influence on the literary scene.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
agent
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Quitting after a fracas he had gone to work as a literary agent and had prospered.
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Her family, besieged by calls, retained New York literary agent Laurie Liss.
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John Pawsey describes a week in the life of a literary agent .
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Nina, the literary agent , was on her way to London on business.
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I gave the novel to the literary agent Curtis Brown to negotiate with a publisher.
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Loretta Barrett, our literary agent , was a successful editor at a major publishing company.
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I therefore contacted a literary agent , Al Zuckerman, who had been introduced to me as the brother-in-law of a colleague.
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Simple start All seemed relatively simple at the start, recalls literary agent Alexandra Cann.
allusion
▪
A little literary allusion , for another.
circle
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Eleanor's husband had secured his first lectureship, and her first novel had been acclaimed in literary circles .
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By 1920 she had proved herself by earning a living in a difficult world, and by winning recognition in literary circles .
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Bill Raeper was well known in literary circles in Oxford.
critic
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Bakhtin is unusual among literary critics in making the focus of his activity the novel rather than lyric poetry or drama.
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She is learning skills that trial lawyers and literary critics , alike, use.
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He was equally admired by literary critics , such as Southey and De Quincey.
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I just wanted to know what the literary critics are into now.
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His other major influence was to be his wife, the literary critic and translator Farzaneh Taheri.
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Morrison clearly enjoyed this foray into the territory of the literary critic .
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The relationship between content and style has been a constant and controversial preoccupation of literary critics .
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Megill writes not as a literary critic but as a philosophically trained historian of ideas.
criticism
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Author of seven books, he is rector of a literary institute, where he lectures on literary criticism .
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The literature of opera includes plenty of criticism , much of it as intellectually impressive as the best literary criticism.
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In a longer perspective, the contribution of Marxists to literary criticism is considerable.
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But then Hugo Gonzales mentioned that he some-times thought of writing a book of literary criticism .
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Not only sociology and cultural anthropology but even a field like literary criticism increasingly becomes infested with the jargon of empirical addiction.
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In literary criticism , the idea of the postmodern has scarcely taken hold at all.
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The main game of both critics is to appropriate the language of literary criticism for their analyses of television.
culture
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The malaise about a shared intellectual and literary culture was short-lived, the product of passing confrontation.
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And in a country whose language has become the world's lingua franca its literary culture is its culture.
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The poem stylistically asserts its participation in high literary culture , a culture by the 1670s unquestionably associated with a social elite.
editor
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He had told her that he had to be quick on the phone because his literary editor was listening to him.
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Joe wrote extensively for the magazine and became a literary editor during his final year.
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In 1935 he became literary editor of the Listener, a post he held for twenty-four years.
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He contributed to the Grotonian and be-came literary editor in his sixth-form year.
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They were headed by the Guardian's literary editor , Claire Armitstead.
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When Amis became literary editor of the New Statesman, he appointed Barnes his deputy.
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There should be an agreement among literary editors , not to employ Kingsley Amis to review any book dealing with humour.
figures
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Great literary figures past and present.
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Scholars have found, for instance, surprising links between Taylor and a number of literary figures .
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There were great discussions especially among show business and literary figures , about the legalization of pot.
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Yet, along with journalists, poets, literary figures , and agitators, they do help form opinions.
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Or perhaps established literary figures enjoy a certain immunity from such cranky zeal.
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If by chance there were no illustrious literary figures to listen to, everyone went to bed early.
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No other nation's literary figures could speak like Austen's heroes and heroines.
form
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Conversely, poetry is in many ways closer to music than to the more extended and discursive literary forms .
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But what does this mean for literary form ?
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For Robbe-Grillet, there was also a direct correlation between Balzacian realism as a literary form and the society which produced it.
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And what will be the consequences in literary form of this satisfaction with the immediate?
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The Formalists evaluate literary form for its perceptibility and not for its mimetic capacity.
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As the millennium approaches the memoir has become the trendiest of literary forms .
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Since materials are classified and grouped first by language, all literary forms such as poetry are scattered according to language. 4.
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Form criticism Form criticism is concerned with the study of literary form in the Bible.
genre
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By the 1850s the tradition had declined, so that Baudelaire was seeking to give new life to a decayed literary genre .
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Evidence suggests that some teachers are least happy about teaching poetry to this age group, in comparison with the other main literary genres .
heritage
▪
Unlike these cities, Dublin is thought of first and foremost for its literary heritage , rather than for its art.
historian
▪
It is what makes him such a refreshing literary historian .
▪
The Faculty in those days was comparatively small, and still dominated by old men who were primarily literary historians .
history
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His death marks the close of half a century of academic and literary history , of which he was the chronicler.
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Her knowledge of publishing trends, literary history , and books of every description and genre, however, filled rooms.
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Sequels are part and parcel of literary history .
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It includes also some illuminating statements by the poets themselves on their aesthetic outlook and their place in literary history .
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Similarly, seventeenth-century literary history is not merely a progress of lyric development from Donne to Marvell.
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His nomenclature has a very respectable literary history .
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Post-war Britain found its own literary history , at least since mid-Victorian times, still unwritten.
journal
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Though published quarterly, it was very different from the traditional quarterly literary journal .
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Several have been published in fine literary journals .
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The low circulation and poor distribution of leading literary journals provide clear evidence of the élitist character of the cultured few.
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The old literary journal on the kindling pile is as satisfying as the newest ones creating a stir back in the city.
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These were after all the two leading literary journals .
language
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For many teachers therefore written language is equated with literary language, with the polished performance of narrative, drama or poetry.
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Scepticism about literary language , however, was not only the province of those opposed in some absolutist sense to literary practices.
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In the examples that I have taken, he generalises from literary language to an account of all language.
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All language and not just literary language, is informed by the play of différance.
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This sounds like a criterion for literary language .
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They also disagree on how functions are manifested in literary language .
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This was particularly true of the highly organised rhetoric of some literary language .
magazine
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It is not just a question of new ground being broken in the academic journals and literary magazines .
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I talked about literature and philosophy and about the literary magazine , and he watched me.
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He vaguely remembered her name from the literary magazines , where she was quite well thought of.
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She landed in a literary publications class at the University of Baltimore, where the assignment was to produce a literary magazine .
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I often see his picture in literary magazines .
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I ended up number one in the class, managing editor of the paper, and started a literary magazine .
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He sends his work to a tiny literary magazine and hopes that one day one of this screenplays might be published.
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Poet and editor of JackLeg, a community-based literary magazine .
merit
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Obviously, there is no literary merit in such rhymes.
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For most novels of literary merit , neither the dualist nor the monist doctrine will be entirely satisfactory.
production
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Apart from philosophical essays and translations, May Sinclair's early literary production covered poetry and short stories.
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This more sophisticated view of literary production is clearly at odds with the vulgar Marxist criticism of Zhdanov, Radek and Stetsky.
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With these words Nizan set out in 1932 his fundamental views on literary production .
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Clearly the aesthetic and technical problems of literary production had been conveniently neglected and subsumed within a strategically advantageous ideological reference system.
scene
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We had a few concluding words about the literary scene in London, which he thought to have reached a pretty low ebb.
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The Beat Generation and their fellow writers never rose to a position of world dominance on the literary scene .
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Perhaps the only firm conclusion to emerge from this continuing debate is the recognition that the literary scene has become pluralistic.
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It's a breath of fresh air on the stale London literary scene .
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As the century went on, women poets exercised much greater influence on the literary scene .
study
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This dilemma has been present since the beginnings of institutionalized literary study .
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Jakobson's essay thus constitutes as strong a claim as can possibly be made for the relevance of linguistics to literary study .
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Herbert would seem to be far more obviously the choice for literary study , and the institutional canon confirms this.
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Nevertheless, there are no fixed rules about justifying arguments in literary studies .
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Of the many functional classifications of language that have been proposed, three have had some currency in literary studies .
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Literariness, and not this or that work by this or that author, is the object of literary studies .
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In practice, it weakens the claim of literary study to be a coherent and self-sufficient discipline.
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An adversarial stance appeared in literary study .
style
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His literary style was plain and factual, without witticisms or flourishes, and his character seems similar.
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Writing done for other purposes generally does not make such generous use of subheadings and depends on literary style for effective communication.
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Together, these arguments may seem to leave very little foothold for quantitative methods in the study of literary style .
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His literary style is representative of this highly charged emotional tone.
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So finally, it is with literary style or dramatic mode.
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He emphasizes how variegated were the personalities of these poets, and the literary styles which they practised.
text
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It largely disappears when literary texts are treated as cultural traces in a cognitive rather than an affective reading.
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They were arriving in their World Humanities class unable to make sense of a literary text .
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Examining Spenser and Ireland, therefore, raises more questions about relations between literary texts and historical contexts than it resolves.
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The exploration of literary texts is not an elitist activity, distinct from the study of other means of communication.
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Even if literary texts were not seen as copies of reality, they were nevertheless regarded as copies of structuralist models.
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But the distinction between literary texts and cultural texts is important, and I shall return to it.
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A literary text is compatible with an indefinite number of contexts yielding indefinitely many readings and re-readings.
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For the production-model of the literary text is a very academic one.
theory
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Brooke-Rose's engagement with feminist theory is typical of her encounter with literary theory in general.
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Everyone knows that, or at least everyone who has read his or her beginner's guide to literary theory .
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Contemporary literary theory has also questioned whether a relation between words and things is easily achieved, even possible.
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As far as literary theory is concerned, it is perhaps this more than anything else which constitutes the structuralist revolution.
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In literary theory they emerge as Marxism, phenomenology, existentialism, structuralism, poststructuralism, deconstruction.
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Tredell's analysis is perhaps too synchronic, suggesting that the various modes of literary theory coexist, whether easily or uneasily.
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The result is a range of different genres of literary criticism and literary theory , to some extent distinguished by register.
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What flows from his pen in this book is a mixture of autobiography, literary theory , and metaphysical speculation.
tradition
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It is as if by working in Weston Hall, Leapor came into contact with that family's modest literary tradition .
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I ask you: why did women think they could suppress a literary tradition of hundreds of years?
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The literary tradition associates the beginning of painting with Corinth and neighbouring Sicyon.
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The period of emancipation, the flowering of literary tradition , the Holocaust.
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What they do have, though, is a literary tradition , which reveres the short story.
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Fly fishing has a literary tradition , too.
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The literary tradition is valued in so far as it offers a critical evaluation of this transformation and its consequences.
work
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But on the second level, in most novels and plays there is a sequence of exposure within the literary work itself.
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But when I find homes or schools in which literary work primarily involves worksheets and computer programs, I do object.
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The literary work is to define the mould which is to be instrumental in shaping the life's work.
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Such an outlook is particularly well illustrated by the literary work of the Arminian clergyman, George Herbert.
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I said that literary work often left me with a depressed feeling.
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Yet Golshiri never allowed anger to turn his literary work into sloganeering.
works
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So many of the literary works having hypocrisy in their title add to it the word exposed, or a synonym.
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These criteria, sensible or not, apply almost exclusively to literary works .
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The main thrust will be in the middle ground, but we want to publish good quality literary works as well.
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In this scheme of things there is obviously no place for the biographies and personalities of the producers of literary works .
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The bulk of his library of about twenty thousand volumes, consists of historical and literary works .
world
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In little pockets - that's nothing unusual, in the literary world .
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The presentation of information is not neatly organized by the literary world into important and non-important scientific material.
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The London literary world runs on bile.
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Maligned by their critics and adored by their readers, romances have definitely had an effect upon the literary world .
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In recent years the lifestyle of the intelligence officer has acquired a glamorous image thanks to the literary world and the screen.
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But Fielding enters the literary world dragging all the paraphernalia of neoclassicism behind him.
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He was a man of influence in the literary world .
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
literary criticism
▪
a very literary style of writing
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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Drawn to the subject via a footnote, McKillop did some literary detective work to uncover Deeks's story.
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Gow acted as Housman's literary executor, and supervised a reprint of his edition of Manilius.
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His literary proteges were allowed to publish more and the film industry also prospered.
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It ended up getting published in the literary magazine but I got a B in the course.
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It largely disappears when literary texts are treated as cultural traces in a cognitive rather than an affective reading.
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So many of the literary works having hypocrisy in their title add to it the word exposed, or a synonym.
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The malaise about a shared intellectual and literary culture was short-lived, the product of passing confrontation.
▪
What is everywhere assumed, if not always made explicit, is that literary judgement has no place in the academy.