A Manual of Good EnglishGeorge Newnes, 1950 - 318 pagina's To improve writing techniques. |
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Pagina 52
... answer is in the negative . ( The answer is No. ) ( d ) It cannot in the opinion of His Majesty's Government be classified as slavery in the extreme acceptance of the word without some risk of terminological inexactitude . ( So Mr ...
... answer is in the negative . ( The answer is No. ) ( d ) It cannot in the opinion of His Majesty's Government be classified as slavery in the extreme acceptance of the word without some risk of terminological inexactitude . ( So Mr ...
Pagina 214
... answer . He cannot supplement the defective answers - he is often tempted to do so , and he sometimes yields to the temptation - by carry- ing over a few marks from the brilliant answer . The same remarks apply - mutatis mutandis , as ...
... answer . He cannot supplement the defective answers - he is often tempted to do so , and he sometimes yields to the temptation - by carry- ing over a few marks from the brilliant answer . The same remarks apply - mutatis mutandis , as ...
Pagina 302
... answers lacked care " is written instead of the more effective " Often the answer lacked care ” or " Many answers lacked care " ; or when " It was evident that he was dismayed at the news " is written rather than “ Evidently he was ...
... answers lacked care " is written instead of the more effective " Often the answer lacked care ” or " Many answers lacked care " ; or when " It was evident that he was dismayed at the news " is written rather than “ Evidently he was ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accent adjective adverb Alice Alice in Wonderland Antony beauty Ben Jonson better Brutus Cęsura called Charles Lamb clause comma consonant dear delight doth effective English example expression eyes G. B. SHAW give grammar Greek Hamlet hand hath hear hearers heart honour Iambic Pentameter idea instance Julius Cęsar King Lady language Latin light lines live Look Lord Macaulay matter meaning metaphor metonymy Milton mind never Nominative Absolute notice noun objective Paradise Lost paragraph passage Perhaps periphrasis person phrase play plural poem poet poetry Pope preposition pronoun pronunciation prose question quotation reader reason rhyming rhythm sense sentence Shakespeare silent sing singular sonnet sound speak speaker speech spelling split infinitive style sweet syllable talk tell term thee thing thou thought tongue Transitive Verb TROCHEE usually verb verse voice vowel words writing