British and American History: From the Stuarts to the World Wars
The Stuart Dynasty and the Rise of the American Colonies
After Elizabeth I’s death, the Stuart Dynasty began. James I of England and VI of Scotland had to manage the Scottish Kirk and the confrontation between Highland and Lowland clans. He created the Calvinist Church, so he was Protestant, and the Catholics were discontented. He wrote the Basilikon Doron, where he wrote how to be a good Christian and a good monarch and how to behave properly. Also, he wrote The True Law of Free Monarchies, a defense
Read MoreAmerican Literature: Twain, James, Fitzgerald, Steinbeck, Hemingway, Faulkner
American Humor and Cosmopolitanism: Twain and James
LIT 54
1. Introduction
2. 19th Century American Literature Revival
Throughout the 19th century, a real revival of American literature took place. Authors like Whitman, Poe, Twain, and James contributed to the creation of a distinctive American literature with its own idiosyncratic voice. We will delve into two major American novelists of the century: Twain and James, who gave a new impetus to American fiction. With a humorous tone, Twain created novels
Read MoreLexical Analysis and Finite Automata: Key Concepts
Key Characteristics of Context Sensitivity in Lex
- (): Indicates a group.
- (): Indicates a repetition range.
- $: The pattern that precedes it is only recognized if it is at the end of the line.
- ^: Outside the brackets, it indicates that the pattern is only acknowledged if it is at the beginning of the line.
Functions and Variables Provided by PCLEX
- yylex(): Lexical analyzer.
- yytext: This matches the current lexeme.
- yyleng: Length of the current lexeme.
- yylval: A global variable.
- yyerror(): A function that is
Stylistic Devices in Literature: Definitions & Examples
Stylistic Devices in Literature
Alliteration
Alliteration is the repetition of certain sounds, usually consonants, throughout a phrase, verse, or stanza:
…With the traitor wing of light, fan
Onomatopoeia
When alliteration imitates real sounds of nature, it is called onomatopoeia:
Uco, Uco, Uco, Uco, bee-eaters
Paranomasia
Paranomasia is the use of words that sound alike but have different meanings:
…As to ants, like so many, like everyone else.
Epithet
An epithet is an adjective accompanying a noun, expressing
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