betimes उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Central Park West Trilogy includes three novels, " The Nihilesthete ", " Penthouse F " and " Charlie P . ", originally published separately and collected for the first time in a single volume by the European publisher Betimes Books.
- Unknown to Hitler, on 14 February Eden had written to the Quai d'Orsay stating that Britain and France should " enter betimes into negotiations . . . for the surrender on conditions of our rights in the zone while such surrender still has got a bargaining value ".
- Betimes in the morning the ground began to sink, so much that three great Elm trees were suddenly swallowed into the Pit; the tops falling downward into the hole; and before ten of the clock they were so overwhelmed, that no part of them might be discovered, the Concave being suddenly filled with Water.
- Some words that Fowler found objectionable, such as " albeit, for ( e ) bears " and " proven " have found their way into normal English idiom and have been replaced in more recent editions of " Modern English Usage " by, amongst others, " betimes, peradventure, quoth " and " whilom ".
- Sir Charles Dilke, in a review of the collection of letters in the " Athenaeum ", calls the book the greatest impeachment of a woman s sense of womanly delicacy to be found in the history of literature . Louise Imogen Guiney remarked in 1890 that Fanny was vain and shallow, she was almost a child; the gods denied her the seeing eye, and made her unaware . Seventy years after the poet s death, most of us are soberly thankful that he escaped betimes from his own heart s desire, and his worst impending peril, Mrs . Keats . Richard Le Gallienne wrote that it is certainly a particularly ironical paradox that the lady irritatingly associated with ( Keats ) name should be the least congruous of all the many commonplace women transfigured by the genius they could not understand, and the love of which they were not worthy . . . . Fame, that loves to humour its poets, has consented to glorify the names of many unimportant poor relations of genius, but there has never been a more significant name upon its lips than the name of Fanny Brawne . . . . One writes so, remembering . . . the tortures to which she subjected a noble spirit with her dancing-class coquetries .