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used the term in reference to the way that the philosophy of "new criticism" proscribes a limitation on the use of interdisciplinary criticism, suggesting that, for those who wish to dabble with a text by using tools from outside the literary tradition (i.e. using the critical techniques of other
80:'Favour me with your tongues'. During official ritual acts a herald ordered the others to be silent by saying this phrase. It was done in order to avert an interruption by a careless, maybe also an ominous, word.
42:
phrase, which means "facilitate with your tonguesโ ("tongues" as the organ of speech). In other words, "hold your tongue" or "facilitate the ritual acts by being silent".
164:
89:
46:
119:
62:
169:
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artistic disciplines on literature), they would do well to 'hold their tongues.'
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99:
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39:
109:
50:
8:
32:
7:
25:
144:Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays
27:Latin phrase encouraging silence
1:
186:
165:Latin words and phrases
45:The phrase is used by
33:
90:Marcus Tullius Cicero
112:(43 BC โ AD 17/18),
134:Naturalis historia
132:(AD 23 โ AD 79),
16:(Redirected from
177:
122:(4 BC โ AD 65),
102:(65 BC โ 8 BC),
92:(106 BCโ43 BC),
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21:
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130:Pliny the Elder
86:
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59:Pliny the Elder
34:Favete linguis!
28:
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94:De divinatione
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18:Favete linguis
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140:Northrop Frye
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124:De vita beata
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69:Northrop Frye
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142:(1919-91),
159:Categories
151:References
106:(3, 1, 2)
116:(2, 654)
84:Examples
170:Silence
136:(28, 3)
126:(26, 7)
104:Carmina
96:(2, 83)
38:" is a
120:Seneca
100:Horace
76:Origin
63:Seneca
55:Horace
47:Cicero
114:Fasti
40:Latin
146:(82)
110:Ovid
61:and
51:Ovid
65:.
161::
57:,
53:,
49:,
30:"
20:)
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