Colloquial Language in Ulysses: A Reference Tool

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University of Delaware Press, 1995 - 294 էջ
"For more than half a century, the extraordinary range of vocabularies and styles in Joyce's Ulysses has been an object of critical and scholarly attention. For the better part of a decade, R. W. Dent has been gathering documentation on a single aspect of this work, what may loosely be called the "colloquial language." The result of this research, Colloquial Language in Ulysses, as its subtitle implies, is essentially a reference tool. It uses "colloquial" in the ordinary sense, "characteristic of or appropriate to the spoken language or to writing that seeks the effect of speech; informal." Taking heart in the fact that the Oxford English Dictionary and Eric Partridge's Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English frequently disagree on the matter, Dent includes as colloquial a great deal that purists might question or disallow." "For the most part, this work provides raw, useful data for Ulysses critics and scholars, but it rarely attempts to perform the work of literary critics. It will make users aware both of new information and of information already available in such reference works as the recently revised OED, for many users not readily accessible. Like the OED itself it is necessarily a work-in-progress, especially in its efforts to provide pre-Ulysses evidence, but it is abundantly useful in its present state." "Most entries supplement - and many correct - entries in its principal predecessor, Don Gifford's Ulysses Annotated. Colloquial Language in Ulysses attempts to include all colloquial expressions on which Gifford is seriously inadequate, questionable, or demonstrably mistaken, and all on which the 1988 edition differs substantially from the earlier edition of 1974."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

From inside the book

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Preface
9
Users Guide
11
The Telemachiad
27
Telemachus
29
Nestor
35
Proteus
37
The Wanderings of Ulysses
41
Calypso
43
Sirens
109
Cyclops
119
Nausicaa
151
Oxen of the Sun
169
Circe
193
The Homecoming
227
Eumaeus
229
Ithaca
251

Lotus Eaters
47
Hades
55
Aeolus
65
Lestrygonians
75
Scylla and Charybdis
95
Wandering Rocks
101
Penelope
253
An Unsolved Phrase
277
Some Noncolloquialisms
279
Bibliography of Works Cited
287
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Common terms and phrases

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Էջ 289 - LIFE IN LONDON : or, the Day and Night Scenes of Jerry Hawthorn, Esq., and his Elegant Friend, Corinthian Tom.
Էջ 52 - s nothing: pain many times is taken away with the apprehension of greater, as the toothache with the sight of a barber that comes to pull it out; there 's philosophy for you.
Էջ 230 - Me miserable! which way shall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite despair? Which way I fly is Hell; myself am Hell; And, in the lowest deep, a lower deep, Still threatening to devour me, opens wide, To which the Hell I suffer seems a Heaven.
Էջ 95 - Ireland, isn't it grand you look — Like a bride in her rich adornin', And with all the pent-up love of my heart I bid you the top o...
Էջ 86 - SEE a pin and pick it up, All the day you'll have good luck ; See a pin and let it lay, Bad luck you'll have all the day ! CLX.
Էջ 72 - I've always loved pictures. I could draw on wood at a very tender age. When a mere child I once drew a small cart-load of raw turnips over a wooden bridge. The people of the village noticed me. I drew their attention. They said I had a future before me. Up to that time I had an idea it was behind me.

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