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Updated: June 26, 2025
When he is with his sister one can tolerate him, but alone " She held up her thin wrinkled hands with a little gesture of elision, at which her expressive shoulders assisted.
"Here, let's get it straight.... With her permission I brought her here in a four-wheeler." He was carefully suppressing all mention of Frognall Street, and in Calendar's glance read approval of the elision. "She didn't want to get out, unless you were here. I asked for you. The maid showed me up-stairs. I left your daughter in the cab and by the way, I hadn't paid the driver. That's funny, too!
But the just and dexterous use of what qualities we have, the proportion of one part to another and to the whole, the elision of the useless, the accentuation of the important, and the preservation of a uniform character end to end these, which taken together constitute technical perfection, are to some degree within the reach of industry and intellectual courage.
"non enim rumores ponebat ante salutem." Elision played a prominent part in his system. This was natural, since with all his changes many long or intractable terminations remained, e.g. enim, quidem, omnium, &c. These were generally elided, sometimes shortened as in the line quoted, sometimes lengthened as in the comedians, "inimicitiam agitantes."
That celebrated romance had been going on all these years with the elision of several generations; because though few members of the family were allowed to see their twenty-fifth year, it was impossible to squeeze them all into the crusading times; and besides the reigning favourites must be treated to an adventure with Coeur de Lion.
He would accelerate this wished-for elision of love by procuring absolutely indisputable proof of Mortimer's dishonesty. He saw his opening to that end; he could do it under the guise of clearing the innocent one of the suspected two; for Allis alone this would be.
O'Shane on his guard that was all he meant." "Phoo!" said Cornelius O'Shane; but checking the expression of his contempt for the man, he made an abrupt transition to Connal's horse, which had just come to the door. "That's a handsome horse! certainly you are well mounted, Mr. Connal." O'Shane's elision of contempt was beyond Mr. Connal's understanding or feeling.
So the portents described by Virgil as following on the death of Caesar are told again by Manilius at the end of Bk. In Metre. In all these points Manilius is a little less strict than Ovid, e.g. He also follows Virgil in alliteration, which Ovid does not. The great frequency of elision in Virgil must be regarded as an archaism. This is, perhaps, rather an artistic defect, but it is designed.
There was also all the obscurity arising from elision, and from the most extravagant and hyperbolical epithets.
There is no appreciable difficulty in any of its functions according to tests made for ataxia, strength, recognition of form, finer movements, etc., in fact, she uses this hand to write with, as she cannot talk at all. Such writing is free, unaccompanied by errors in spelling, there is no elision of syllables and no difficulty in finding the words desired. The face is symmetrical on the two sides.
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