none1noDespite being widely recognised as perhaps the greatest humorous novelist in the English language, and frequently also simply as a great creative genius (Hilaire Belloc called Wodehouse “the best living writer of English”), as Golab notes, “little evidence has been shown to justify this claim”, there is almost no literature “attempting to specify the reasons for Wodehouse’s success as a humorous writer” (2004: 35). There have been precious few linguistic-stylistic studies of Wodehouse’s works and certainly none which incorporate corpus-assisted analysis.nonePartington APartington
Objective: The article is devoted to the writing styles used by great writer Arthur Conan Doyle in h...
Humour, depending on the level of comprehension of the audience to which it is directed, may be divi...
This essay strives to explain Wodehouse’s status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoym...
In this paper I consider two discourse types, one written and literary, the other spoken and semi-co...
At the heart of any examination of literature there lies a germinating thought that grows into an ex...
P. G. Wodehouse has long been neglected, if not ostracised, by academia and critics, because of a pe...
Research on Humour and Translation studies requires instruments capable to appreciate their complex ...
Those familiar with the various comically inclined works of P.G. Wodehouse are, or should be, well a...
P. G. Wodehouse offers a serious and sustained critique of English society using the game of cricket...
What is humour? From what sources does it proceed, and what are its functions? These are questions w...
In this paper the author considers how British novelist P. G. Wodehouse's literary image has transfo...
Research on Humour and Translation studies requires instruments capable to appreciate their complex ...
Sense of humor is an indispensable aspect of human nature, without which human life not only looks d...
The article is devoted to the study of Edward Lear’s art and literary works, in particular his nonse...
The article deals with classification and analyze of various types of grotesque in the novels of a d...
Objective: The article is devoted to the writing styles used by great writer Arthur Conan Doyle in h...
Humour, depending on the level of comprehension of the audience to which it is directed, may be divi...
This essay strives to explain Wodehouse’s status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoym...
In this paper I consider two discourse types, one written and literary, the other spoken and semi-co...
At the heart of any examination of literature there lies a germinating thought that grows into an ex...
P. G. Wodehouse has long been neglected, if not ostracised, by academia and critics, because of a pe...
Research on Humour and Translation studies requires instruments capable to appreciate their complex ...
Those familiar with the various comically inclined works of P.G. Wodehouse are, or should be, well a...
P. G. Wodehouse offers a serious and sustained critique of English society using the game of cricket...
What is humour? From what sources does it proceed, and what are its functions? These are questions w...
In this paper the author considers how British novelist P. G. Wodehouse's literary image has transfo...
Research on Humour and Translation studies requires instruments capable to appreciate their complex ...
Sense of humor is an indispensable aspect of human nature, without which human life not only looks d...
The article is devoted to the study of Edward Lear’s art and literary works, in particular his nonse...
The article deals with classification and analyze of various types of grotesque in the novels of a d...
Objective: The article is devoted to the writing styles used by great writer Arthur Conan Doyle in h...
Humour, depending on the level of comprehension of the audience to which it is directed, may be divi...
This essay strives to explain Wodehouse’s status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoym...