English/German Dictionary of Idioms

English/German Dictionary of Idioms
Author: Professor Hans Schemann
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 576
Release: 2013-04-15
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 1135114358

This dictionary is the ideal supplement to the German/English Dictionary of Idioms, which together give a rich source of material for the translator from and into each language. The dictionary contains 15,000 headwords, each entry supplying the German equivalents, variants, contexts and the degree of currency/rarity of the idiomatic expression. This dictionary will be an invaluable resource for students and professional literary translators. Not for sale in Germany, Austria or Switzerland

Empower

Empower
Author: Steve Eddy
Publisher: Folens Limited
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2003-03
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781843032823

This Empower full colour textbook allows lower-attaining students, who are working at a level below National Curriculum expectations, full access to the English curriculum. Key elements of the English Framework are addressed and material with a strong emphasis on writing and the modelling of key text types is provided. The textbook contains five sections covering Literary and Non-literary Writing, Media/ICT, Poetry, and Scripts and Screenplays. The Framework objectives are covered in each unit. Starter activities, reading source texts and modelling writing are included, plus a summary of key points and a profile of achievement.

Beyond My Story

Beyond My Story
Author: Davion Linton Gowie
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 63
Release: 2019-12-11
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 172839337X

the book is about my thoughts on religion, life it’s self, and to prove and highlight what I believe’s God. Also to highlight the cause effects of certain social issues.

In Search of (Non)Sense

In Search of (Non)Sense
Author: Elżbieta Chrzanowska-Kluczewska
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 315
Release: 2009-01-14
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1443803839

[…] it would seem natural to assume that the disciplines of literary studies and linguistics should by rights converge regularly to exchange views as each pursues its own goals. Is such a convergence possible on the question of sense and nonsense? James W. Underhill (this volume) The contributors to the present volume have focused their attention on two sets of problems that are leitmotifs in all the articles gathered. Firstly, should literary semantics – the linguistic study of texts/discourses marked with the feature of ‘literariness’ and ‘poeticalness’ – strive after an interpretation of all such texts at all costs? Are all literary texts interpretable? How do we cope with such troublesome linguistic phenomena as anomaly, deviance, and absurdity? Aren’t we, by any chance, fascinated by nonsense? Do we try to make it at least partly meaningful? Is interpretability our default value? The introductory article by the renowned scholar Margaret H. Freeman is an important voice, indeed a manifesto of sorts of literary semanticists in this respect. Secondly, while trying to answer all these questions, well aware of the fact that literary semantics is a fuzzy branch of linguistic studies, we have attempted at exploring its borderline zone to see to what extent we have to draw from various theoretical sources. Literary semanticists have often proved that they are capable of arguing contrastively in the atmosphere of openness to such neighbouring fields as: discourse analysis, literary pragmatics and reader-response theories, narratology, literary semiotics and hermeneutics, translation studies and – very importantly – the philosophy of language. The authors contributing to this book, an international company of regularly cooperating linguists and literary scholars, strike a nice balance between the cognitive and the more traditionally or philosophically-oriented frameworks of study, being a vivid proof that cognitive and other “denominations” are perfectly capable of fruitful coexistence. The volume ends with a short presentation by Radosław Nowakowski, already known to academic and artistic audiences in Europe as a creator and propagator of liberature – the art of unusual bookmaking, the art of the book liberated from our traditional preconceptions. We hope that our volume will be of interest to academics and students of literary theory and linguistics alike, especially those involved in literary semantics, stylistics and poetics. Naturally, the book is also addressed to members and sympathizers of IALS (International Association of Literary Semantics) and the readers of Journal of Literary Semantics, scattered across the world.

What Goes Around

What Goes Around
Author: Alexandra Carew
Publisher: Kensington Books
Total Pages: 372
Release: 2003-08-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780758204349

When her past and present collide, Cat Wellesley, stuck in a temp job where her only salvation is office gossip and fantasizing about her gorgeous boss, finds herself faced with difficult choices and unexpected encounters that could either makes things worse or turn her life around. Original. 40,000 first printing.

A Book of Nonsense

A Book of Nonsense
Author: Edward Lear
Publisher:
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1862
Genre: Children's poetry, English
ISBN:

A collection of over 100 limericks with the author's original illustrations.

Decision and Dissent

Decision and Dissent
Author: David Brianza
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 1007
Release: 2012-11
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1475957513

Meet Alyssa Dashiell-attractive, gifted young attorney, relishing the wellearned reward of a few moments to herself behind the wheel of a founding partner's Bugatti Veyron, the world's fastest car. Powerless to resist taking the once-in-a-lifetime experience to its extreme, she gains the attention of Police Officer Connor Daeman-an encounter that proves life-changing for both in ways neither could imagine. A fast-flowing chain of events rapidly unfolds; enthralling, hold-yourbreath occurrences that lead inexorably to what will be called the trial of the century-a powerful courtroom drama, as provocative as it is divisive, that pits two of the world's finest lawyers against each other in a contest that puts everything on the line, with the potential to abolish centuries of hard-earned rights for millions. It is a trial, controversial, incendiary, and tainted with madness, that sets the stage to blow the lid off the naïve belief that there are some things that just can't happen in America. Suspenseful, alarming, and destined for controversy, Decision and Dissent is to be counted among those rare novels that require courage on the part of the reader; virtually every page will affect the reader like no story he or she has ever read before. Explosive action, humour, and provocative points of view expressed by characters who leap to life will hold the reader spellbound to the very last page.

Bliss

Bliss
Author: Ronit Matalon
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2003-08-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0805066020

Set in Tel Aviv and Paris, a powerful story of love, friendship, regret, and war, as current as today's headlines Ronit Matalon's fiction has been praised as "haunting," "inventive," "refreshingly daring." Now in a graceful, illuminating second novel, she tells a provocative story of two loves, two partings, two worlds, two women: Ofra and Sarah. When Ofra is called from Tel Aviv to France to attend the funeral of her beloved cousin Michel, she escapes a life lived vicariously through Sarah, her oldest friend, a photographer and political activist. In Paris, Ofra enters the embrace of her French family and the intimate world of domestic life, while Sarah, in Tel Aviv, drifts even farther from her husband, Udi. Drawn to a Palestinian nationalist, she takes on the fight for a girl from Gaza who has been injured by an Israeli bullet and needs medical treatment that can only be had inside Israel. As Sarah adopts the cause with near- destructive zeal and pledges herself to the suffering of others, her own child goes untended, with dreadful consequences for all. Against a backdrop of national conflict, Bliss confronts the terrible dilemma of choosing between one's desires and one's beliefs, between grand ideological commitment and the more mundane claims of family. With vivid, penetrating prose, Matalon has delivered a large and resonant work that is as artful as it is affecting.