What's the difference between auctorial and authorial?
Auctorial
Definition:
Example Sentences:
Authorial
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to an author.
Example Sentences:
(1) This filtering of life through art is no mere authorial technique: it is an approach to living that Bechdel practises every day at home in Vermont.
(2) The docs I like are irremediably hybrid – a mixture of authorial personality, cod epistemology, appropriated or created history and whatever seems current and interesting.
(3) When I wrote my autobiography Manchester United Ruined My Life, Jack was the first person to read the draft manuscript and the one who encouraged me to discover the vital ingredient of the authorial voice.
(4) Richard's position on women is unreconstructed, and he's given some witty misogynist lines, which isn't the same as authorial endorsement.
(5) Facebook Twitter Pinterest An empty Australian lifeboat used to carry asylum seekers turned back by the Australian authories.
(6) These results highlight the importance of implied, authorial intentions in understanding metaphorical statements.
(7) Flaubert did strange things, such as eliminating any authorial voice or stable moral centre; he used the imperfect as his main tense, giving a single action the sense of being suspended in time; played with varying shades of irony down to the deepest hues of pastiche; slipped between the subjective and the objective viewpoint without a tremor.
(8) Banks's protagonist, Alban McGill, struggles to prevent his family's company from being taken over by a US giant, occasioning diatribes against American capitalism and American foreign policy that seem straightforwardly authorial.
(9) Graves, some with more than a hundred bodies, were dug in rural areas just outside the capital, while in the shantytown of Carrefour local authories said more than 2,000 corpses were burned.
(10) Indeed, the opening of Arthur Gordon Pym mirrors exactly the beginning of Crusoe , and borrows a similar authorial device.
(11) Terry once wrote an introduction to Brewer’s and it made me smile – we would call each other up in delight whenever we discovered a book by Brewer we had not seen before (“’Ere!’ Have you already got a copy of Brewer’s A Dictionary of Miracles: Imitative, Realistic and Dogmatic ?”) Terry’s authorial voice is always Terry’s: genial, informed, sensible, drily amused.
(12) The opening line of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is pure ear, pure voice, utter authorial confidence.
(13) "For better and for worse we have a literary culture that reveres the solo writer and backs lone authorial voices," he says.
(14) But she rejected the blog's claim that her disgruntlement stemmed from poor reviews of her own work in the paper: in 2008 a reviewer said she had written her novel Change of Heart "on authorial autopilot" .
(15) In addition to degenerations which are descirbed everywhere and are seen both in phakic and aphakic eyes, the authoris have emphasized lesions which they consider to be specific of aphakia.
(16) Three experiments investigated the role of authorial intentions in metaphor comprehension.
(17) His writing deliberately contains no authorial voice as a commentary on the perspective of the narrator – so in American Psycho , it's not clear whether the murders recounted by its yuppie serial killer Patrick Bateman even take place at all, or are psychotic fantasies.
(18) We were not looking at people's reputations or what they had written before," Rimington told Mark Lawson, blandly rebuking those readers who take an interest in authorial development or literary context, the Booker's history and romans fleuves presumably included.
(19) The structure, with its lumpen authorial interpolations, is painting by numbers: here is one of many possible examples from early in the novel when the rich father of the hero is speaking of his journey through the Alps to be reunited with his mistress (whom he addresses as a sparrow): “‘Ah!
(20) James Hale, my brilliant editor and good friend, the man who – along with his future wife, Hilary – had discovered The Wasp Factory , suggested that to keep UoW 's narrative honest, the authorial voice should never use the (false) name of one of the characters.