-
Oratio obliqua (or
indirect speech) is a
topic in
modern philosophy,
considered to be a
variety of the
wider topic of metarepresentation. In
recent years...
- speech, also
known as
reported speech,
indirect discourse (US), or
ōrātiō oblīqua (/əˈreɪʃɪoʊ əˈblaɪkwə/ or /oʊˈrɑːtɪoʊ ɒˈbliːkwə/), is the practice,...
-
alternative terms for
direct and
indirect reported speech are '
oratio recta' and '
oratio obliqua', respectively. Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum,
Geoffrey (2002)...
-
working motto of
Rugby School oratio recta direct speech expressions from
Latin grammar oratio obliqua indirect speech oratio pro domo
speech for [one's...
-
occur in
Latin literature,
where the
phenomenon often takes the name of
oratio obliqua. It is characteristic, for instance, of the
style of
Julius Caesar,...
- beautiful." In
Latin grammar,
indirect speech is
called ōrātiō oblīqua (direct
speech is
called ōrātiō recta). An
indirect statement or
question can replace...
- Bruni. The latter, for instance,
described the
admiral delivering an
oratio obliqua before his
forces as he led them to meet the Romans. He
would later...
-
reprinted 1962. Salmon, E. T. (1931). "A Note on
Subordinate Clauses in
Oratio Obliqua". The
classical Review, Vol. 45, No. 5 (Nov., 1931), p. 173. Terrell...
- (1951). "The
Function of
Tense Variation in the
Subjunctive Mood of
Oratio Obliqua". The
classical Review, New Series, Vol. 1, No. 3/4 (Dec., 1951), pp...
-
reported speech ("I will stay
until I have learned"),
known as "virtual
ōrātiō oblīqua": ipse intereā,
quoad mūnīta hīberna cognōvisset, in Galliā morārī cōnstituit...