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Page "Linguistic purism in English" ¶ 6
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Cheke and wrote
In a letter to Peter Martyr, John Cheke wrote a fitting eulogy:
The Tudor period writer Sir John Cheke wrote:
Cheke wrote:

Cheke and I
Years afterwards, he pretended that he had only signed the devise as a witness, but in his apology to Queen Mary I, he did not venture to allege so flimsy an excuse ; he preferred to lay stress on the extent to which he succeeded in shifting the responsibility on to the shoulders of his brother-in-law, Sir John Cheke, and other friends, and on his intrigues to frustrate the Queen to whom he had sworn allegiance.

Cheke and be
Following Leland's death or ( more probably ) his descent into madness, King Edward VI arranged for Leland's library ( including many medieval manuscripts ) to be placed in the custody of Sir John Cheke.
Cheke was visited by two priests and by Dr John Feckenham, dean of St Paul's, whom he had formerly tried to convert to Protestantism, and, terrified by the prospect of being burned at the stake, he agreed to be received into the Church of Rome by Cardinal Pole.

Cheke and pure
Writers such as Thomas Elyot flooded their writings with foreign borrowings, whilst writers such as John Cheke sought to keep their writings " pure ".

Cheke and with
In May 1535, at the age of fourteen, he went up to St John's College, Cambridge, where he was brought into contact with the foremost educators of the time, Roger Ascham and John Cheke, and acquired an unusual knowledge of Greek.
John Cheke in turn was friendly with Anthony Denny, who was brother-in-law to Kat Ashley, governess to the Lady Elizabeth.
Cheke was active in public life ; he sat, as member for Bletchingley, for the parliaments of 1547 and 1552-1553 ; he was made provost of King's College, Cambridge ( 1 April 1548 ), was one of the commissioners for visiting that university as well as the University of Oxford and Eton College, and was appointed with seven divines to draw up a body of laws for the governance of the church.
* Life of the learned Sir John Cheke, with his Treatise on Superstition ( 1705 )
In June 1555, he was staying with Sir John Cheke at Padua, and went on from there to visit Sir John Masone, the English ambassador at Antwerp.

Cheke and other
To what extent Edward's document — especially this last change — was influenced by Northumberland, his confidant John Gates, or still other members of the Privy Chamber like Edward's tutor John Cheke or Secretary William Petre, is unclear.
Cawarden used part of the monastery as Revels offices ; other parts he sold or leased to the neighbourhood's wealthy residents, including Lord Cobham and John Cheke.

Cheke and ;
Thomas Wilson, in the epistle prefixed to his translation of the Olynthiacs of Demosthenes ( 1570 ), has a long and most interesting eulogy of Cheke ; and Thomas Nash, in To the Gentlemen Students, prefixed to Robert Greene's Menaphon ( 1589 ), calls him " the Exchequer of eloquence, Sir John Cheke, a man of men, supernaturally traded in all tongues.

Cheke and by
Meanwhile, Edward was brought up a strict and devout Protestant by numerous tutors, including Bishop Richard Cox, John Belmain, and Sir John Cheke.
About 1547 Cheke married Mary, daughter of Richard Hill, sergeant of the wine-cellar to Henry VIII, and by her he had three sons.
According to Julian Hume and Anthony Cheke, it appears that all depictions of white Dodos were based on a single painting or copies of it, showing a whitish specimen, made by Roelant Savery in ca.
Lord Burghley was succeeded by his son from his first marriage to Mary Cheke, Thomas, the second Baron.
* Sunbirds by Cheke, Mann and Allen, ISBN 1-873403-80-1
* Sunbirds-A Guide to the Sunbirds, Flowerpeckers, Spiderhunters and Sugarbirds of the World by Robert A. Cheke and Clive F. Mann, illustrated by Richard Allen ( 2001 ) ISBN 1-873403-80-1

Cheke and her
Cheke then procured him a position as secretary to Sir Richard Morrison ( Moryson ), appointed ambassador to Charles V. It was on his way to join Morrison that he paid his celebrated morning call on Lady Jane Grey at Bradgate, where he found her reading Plato's Phaedo, while every one else was out hunting.

Cheke and .
Wendy Strahm and Anthony Cheke, two experts in Mascarene ecology, claim that while a rare tree, it has germinated since the demise of the Dodo and numbers a few hundred, not 13.
* Witmer, M. C. & Cheke, A. S. ( 1991 ): The dodo and the tambalacoque tree: an obligate mutualism reconsidered.
* 1514 – John Cheke, English scholar ( d. 1557 )
* September 13 – John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( b. 1514 )
* June 16 – John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( d. 1557 )
Many wealthy Protestants, such as John Foxe and John Cheke, fled England, and Walsingham was among them.
The precaution proved useless and four months later Cecil committed one of the rare rash acts of his life in marrying Mary Cheke.
Cheke fell from favour on the accession of Queen Mary, and departed for mainland Europe in 1554: from that point onwards, and continuing after Cheke's death in 1557, the library was dispersed.
The original notebooks passed from Henry Cheke to Humphrey Purefoy, and so ( following his death in 1598 ) to Humphrey's son Thomas, who divided many of them between his two cousins John Hales and the antiquary, William Burton.
On learning about the custom of presenting a memorandum to the king every new year, he worked on a major treatise which he gave as a draft to his friend John Cheke on 21 October 1550.
* September 13-John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( b. 1514 )
Here he fell under the influence of Sir John Cheke, who was admitted a fellow in Ascham's first year, and Sir Thomas Smith.
He and his friend, Sir John Cheke, were the great classical scholars of the time in England.

wrote and I
I don't even remember who wrote it but it was one of those 15th or 16th century poets.
Though I had a great dread of the island and felt I would never leave it alive, I eagerly wrote down everything she told me about its women.
Time's editor, Thomas Griffith, in his book, The Waist-High Culture, wrote: `` most of what was different about it ( the Deep South ) I found myself unsympathetic to.
Later Helion wrote of this phase: `` For years I built for myself a subtle instrument of relationships -- colors and forms without a name.
She wrote in her journal, `` I have not heard the least profane language since I have been on board the vessel.
Consequently, on October 31, 1896, Mrs. King wrote to Thompson, quite against her daughter's wishes, asking him not to `` recommence a correspondence which I believe has been dropped for some weeks ''.
O my genius, young and ripening, you would swear, -- when I wrote them ; ;
In `` My Song's Young Virgin Date '', for example, Thompson wrote: `` Yea, she that had my song's young virgin date Not now, alas, that noble singular she, I nobler hold, though marred from her once state, Than others in their best integrity.
Sturley on November 4 answered a letter from Quiney written on October 25 which imported, wrote Sturley, `` that our countriman Mr. Wm. Shak. would procure us monei: which I will like of as I shall heare when, wheare & howe: and I prai let not go that occasion if it mai sort to ani indifferent condicions.
Baker wrote: `` I tooke order with Sr. E. Grevile for the payment of Ceartaine monei beefore his going towardes London.
He said he was a friend of Heywood Broun who had run a free employment bureau for several months during the depression, but the generous Broun to whom I wrote did not know his name and I somehow conceived the morbid notion that the man in question was prowling round the house.
Mr. Burlingham, -- `` C.C.B. '' -- wrote to me once about an old friend of mine, S. K. Ratcliffe, whom I had first met in London in 1914 and who also came out for a week-end in Weston.
It also happened with the Inauguration, which was not re-run at all during the evening hours, and I wrote to the TV editor of the Times.
I wrote her that I'd met up with Eileen and that old bonds had proved too strong and asked her to send my clothes down by express.
In December I wrote her with authority that we would meet on the steps of the Hotel Astor, a rendezvous spot that I had learned was the most sophisticated.
But in order to keep Letch in the public eye and out of trouble, I wrote in a part especially for him -- that of a dashing ruffian who `` sees the light '' and is saved by the inspiring example of Mother Cabrini.
`` I wrote Bill in my last letter to forget that I had told him that I didn't mean to reconsider my decision not to change my mind -- and he seems to have misunderstood me ''.

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