Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 28, 2025
Lady Fallowfeild it is true, in obedience to suggestions on the part of her kindly lord and master, offered tentatively to import a carriage load little Ludovic Quayle was just the same age as Dickie from the Whitney nurseries to spend the day. "Good fellow, Calmady. I liked Calmady," Lord Fallowfeild had said to her. His conversation, it may be observed, was nothing if not interjectional.
The interjectional appendages to this and the following verse are increased. Tepeyacan was the name of a mountain on which before the Conquest was a temple dedicated to the "Mother of our Life," Tonantzin. 16. tlapalcayocan, "the place of shards," of broken pieces, i.e., the field of battle. I am quite open for correction however.
There was an air of importance in his manner which corresponded to the rural dignity of his exterior, and a habit which he had of throwing out a number of interjectional sounds, uttered with a strange variety of intonation running from bass up to treble in a very extraordinary manner, or breaking off his sentences with a whiff of his pipe, seemed adopted to give an air of thought and mature deliberation to his opinions and decisions.
Does this really mean that, in the writer's opinion, "sensation" is the "agent" by which the "due effect" of the stimulus, which gives rise to sensation, is "wrought out"? Suppose somebody runs a pin into me. The "due effect" of that particular stimulus will probably be threefold; namely, a sensation of pain, a start, and an interjectional expletive.
The Indian gave an involuntary start, uttered a deep interjectional "Ugh!" and, raising his head from his chest, fixed his eye heavily on the officer. "Hookynaster!
To these communications Peggotty replied as promptly, if not as concisely, as a merchant's clerk. Four sides of incoherent and interjectional beginnings of sentences, that had no end, except blots, were inadequate to afford her any relief.
'I think we have almost exhausted our visiting round, said our hostess, Mrs Smith, one morning, as she replenished her card-case, 'with the exception of Really, Indeed, and Impossible, to whom we must introduce you. You look puzzled! but I mean the three Misses Bonderlay, who are usually distinguished by these interjectional names.
Even if, in a purely hypothetical way, a language could be thought of in abstracto, the roots of which only consist in imitations of sounds or interjections, still in the really existing languages, so far as we can trace back and uncover their roots, the roots imitating sounds and the interjectional roots form only a small and entirely isolated minority, which neither shares in, nor is capable of development; they stand like "dead sticks in a live hedge."
The words begin to lose coherence and meaning, and are often purely interjectional. One passage may be noted for its interesting modulations, the alternating duet with the words "Barg im Busen uns sich die Sonne." It is in phrases of three bars in rising semitones, A flat A natural A natural B flat, ending in the beautiful strain No. 13 as they fall asleep in one another's arms.
Your wife has returned to her sofa, you walk up and down, and stop, and you boldly introduce the subject by this interjectional remark: "Caroline, we must send Charles to boarding school." "Charles cannot go to boarding school," she returns in a mild tone. "Charles is six years old, the age at which a boy's education begins." "In the first place," she replies, "it begins at seven.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking