A Manual of Good EnglishTo improve writing techniques. |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 37
Pagina 68
The usual way of forming , from the simple adjective or adverb , the Comparative and Superlative is by the addition ( sometimes with slight spelling modification ) of er and est ; but the adverbs more and most , less and too ...
The usual way of forming , from the simple adjective or adverb , the Comparative and Superlative is by the addition ( sometimes with slight spelling modification ) of er and est ; but the adverbs more and most , less and too ...
Pagina 166
Many of Shakespeare's metaphors have , indeed , become so much a part of the language that not only do we forget their origin but we sometimes use them with little consciousness of the implied comparison . Many a time maybe , you have ...
Many of Shakespeare's metaphors have , indeed , become so much a part of the language that not only do we forget their origin but we sometimes use them with little consciousness of the implied comparison . Many a time maybe , you have ...
Pagina 246
Rhyme is also , as in ( c ) , sometimes used for poetry in general . When the rhyme , as in ( a ) , is one - syllabled ( Queen , Screen , Eyes , dies ) , it is sometimes called a " male " or " masculine " rhyme .
Rhyme is also , as in ( c ) , sometimes used for poetry in general . When the rhyme , as in ( a ) , is one - syllabled ( Queen , Screen , Eyes , dies ) , it is sometimes called a " male " or " masculine " rhyme .
Wat mensen zeggen - Een review schrijven
We hebben geen reviews gevonden op de gebruikelijke plaatsen.
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accent adjective adverb agree answer appears beauty becomes beginning better bring called carry comes common consider course delight effective English example expression eyes fact fall followed give Greek hand head hear heart honour idea important instance King Lady language Latin leaves less light lines live Look Lord manner mark matter meaning Milton mind natural never notice noun objective once original passage Perhaps person phrase play plural poetry present pronoun prose question quotation reader reason rhyming seems sense sentence Shakespeare short single singular sometimes sound speak speech spelling statement style sweet syllable talk tell term thee thing thou thought tongue true turn usually verb verse voice vowel words writing young