Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Inscription of Abercius" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

allusion and St
Changes to the text include a new, albeit silent scene just prior to the Battle of Wakefield where York embraces Rutland before heading out to fight ; an extension of the courtship between Edward and Lady Grey, and the edition of two subplots ; one concerning a mistress of Edward's who he accidentally kills in battle ( an allusion to Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's Philaster ), the other involving an attempt by Warwick to seduce Lady Grey after her husband's death at the Second Battle of St. Albans ( this is later used as a rationale for why Warwick turns against Edward ).
William Hazlitt's essay " Merry England ", appended to his Lectures on the English Comic Writers ( 1819 ), popularised the specific term, introduced in tandem with an allusion to the iconic figure of Robin Hood, under the epigraph " St George for merry England!
The earliest known evidence of this flag was recorded by Davies Gilbert in his 1838 work: ' The Parochial History of Cornwall ', where he gives reference to .." a white cross on a black ground was formerly the banner of St Perran and the Standard of Cornwall ; probably with some allusion to the black ore and the white metal of tin "
This small volume consists entirely of riddles and makes no allusion to bells, St. Clement or any other church.
The St George's Cross is an allusion to the arms of the Hudson's Bay Company, which once controlled what is now Alberta.
'" This is an allusion to the so-called " treacle well ", the curative St. Frideswide's Well at Binsey, Oxfordshire.
The combination of two words that can mean either ' port-close ', ' landing on pillars ' or a Ferreoli Domini, " the lord of Ferreol " veiled allusion to the town, which could have had a temple under the patronage of St. Ferreol.
There is one ostracon with the inscription " St. Peter the evangelist ," perhaps an allusion to the Gospel of Peter.
Apocalypse is performed in Frankfurt in 1926 under Otto Klemperer with Erbe ( an allusion to Karl Erb, the famous Evangelist of Bach's St Matthew Passion ) as the St John narrator.
The doomed child's name Nepomuk, in the 19th century quite popular in Austria and southern Germany and middle name of the composer Hummel and the playwright Johann Nestroy, can be seen as an allusion to the high rococo, the're-echoing of movement ', in the St John Nepomuk Church architecture by the Asam brothers in Munich ( as described and interpreted by Heinrich Wölfflin ).
It is said by St. Jerome and other Catholic Church Fathers that the Tau is an Old Testament allusion to the cross and crucifixion of Jesus mentioned in Ezekiel.

allusion and .
Sturley's allusion probably explains why Greville took out the patent in the names of Best and Wells, for Sir Anthony Ashley described Best as `` a scrivener within Temple Bar, that deals in many matters for my L. Essex '' through Sir Gelly Merrick, especially in `` causes that he would not be known of ''.
Indefinite reference also carries double-meaning where an allusion to one person or thing seems to refer to another.
Davis commenced his remarks by an allusion to the general feeling of opposition which the meeting had encountered from many of the citizens and all the newspapers of the city.
In English writing, the phrase " a modest proposal " is now conventionally an allusion to this style of straight-faced satire.
The traditional etymology is from the Latin aperire, " to open ," in allusion to its being the season when trees and flowers begin to " open ," which is supported by comparison with the modern Greek use of ἁνοιξις ( anoixis ) ( opening ) for spring.
A dismissive allusion in the text to the " wealth of Hungary " has suggested the hypothesis that it was written after 1184, at the time when Bela III of Hungary had sent to the French court a statement of his income and had proposed marriage to Marie's sister Marguerite of France, but before 1186, when his proposal was accepted.
Note the confident local allusion in 19: 9 to " the school of Tyrannus " and in 19: 33 to " Alexander "; also the very minute topography in 20: 13 – 15.
According to the Torah, Benjamin's ( or in some countries, Biniam's ) name arose when Jacob deliberately corrupted the name Benoni, the original name of Benjamin, since Benoni was an allusion to Rachel's dying just after she had given birth, as it means son of my pain.
Justin Martyr ( c. 100 – 165 AD ) who was acquainted with Polycarp, who had been mentored by John, makes a possible allusion to this book, and credits John as the source.
The book could be seen as an allusion to the history as described by Moses ; for the minor Prophets, in promising God ’ s assistance to his people, must often remind how God in a miraculous manner brought up the Jews from Egypt.
His teachings rarely rely on reasoned argument and ethical ideals and methods are conveyed more indirectly, through allusion, innuendo, and even tautology.
* From cretine, French for alluvium ( soil deposited by flowing water ), an allusion to the affliction's suspected origin in inadequate soil.
The film's title is an allusion to a poem by Guillaume Apollinaire.
Calligraphy Chiang Kai-shek etched on a rock in Quemoy reads, " Forget not that you're in Jǔ "— an allusion to the Warring States Period when the State of Qi, cornered into the City of Ju by the State of Yan, successfully counterattacked and retook its territory.
Buckler's character dealt with rebellion and loyalty, with allusion to Frankenstein's monster, in a twelve-issue run.
The ending credits of the show start with thanks to the colorfully nicknamed actual staffers: producer Doug " the subway fugitive, not a slave to fashion, bongo boy frogman " Berman ; " John ' Bugsy ' Lawlor, just back from the ..." every week a different eating event with rhyming foodstuff names ; David " Calves of Belleville " Greene ; Catherine " Frau Blücher " Fenollosa, whose name causes a horse to neigh and gallop ( an allusion to a running gag in the movie Young Frankenstein ); and Carly " High Voltage " Nix, among others.
The lion may be an allusion to Scotland.
Clark's middle name is given variously as either Joseph or Jerome, the latter in allusion to creator Jerry Siegel.
Character-naming in Don Quixote makes ample figural use of contradiction, inversion, and irony, such as the names Rocinante ( a reversal ) and Dulcinea ( an allusion to illusion ), and the word itself, possibly a pun on ( jaw ) but certainly ( Catalan: thighs ), a reference to a horse's rump .< ref > quijote < sup > 1. 2 </ sup >: rump or haunch.
Classical Chinese relies heavily on allusion to a corpus of standard literary works to convey semantic meaning, nuance, and subtext.
In the middle section, the idyllic scene is expanded upon, reinforced by the lilting rhythm of the poem, the dreamlike, pastoral metaphors and allusion to scenes from the Garden of Eden.
Some interpreters understand this reference to be an allusion to the events described in Zechariah 3: 1, 2.
They regard true film noir as belonging to a temporally and geographically limited cycle or period, treating subsequent films that evoke the classics as fundamentally different due to general shifts in filmmaking style and latter-day awareness of noir as a historical source for allusion.

allusion and Paul
Fra Marino also claims to have been alerted to the existence of the Gospel of Barnabas, from an allusion in a work by Irenaeus against Paul ; in a book which had been presented to him by a lady of the Colonna family ( Marino, outside Rome, is the location of the Palazzo Colonna ).
Some Christian theologians, beginning with Paul of Tarsus writing in Galatians, have interpreted an allusion to crucifixion in Deuteronomy.
According to Meyer, Thomas's saying 17: " I shall give you what no eye has seen, what no ear has heard and no hand has touched, and what has not come into the human heart ", is strikingly similar to what Paul wrote in ( which was itself an allusion to )
Others point out that here, as in Galatians 4: 4, Paul does not use the ordinary word for " born " ( γεννητός, gennetos, the word used in in relation to John the Baptist being " born of a woman "), but the word γενόμενος, genomenos, literally meaning " become ", " come to be ", a fact that some interpret as an allusion to incarnation of the pre-existent Son of God.
Paul Brown Stadium is nicknamed " The Jungle ", an allusion not only to the namesake Bengal tiger's natural habitat, but the Guns N ' Roses song " Welcome to the Jungle ".
The Passagen Verlag, the name Passagen being an allusion to Walter Benjamin's most important text Passagenwerk, publishes besides Derrida authors such as Jean-François Lyotard, Gianni Vattimo, Jean Baudrillard, Paul Feyerabend, Peter Eisenman, Jacques Lacan, Ernesto Laclau, Chantal Mouffe, Sarah Kofman, Gerhard Anna Concic-Kaucic, Slavoj Žižek, Emmanuel Levinas, Clifford Geertz, Ginka Steinwachs, Dennis Cooper, Wolfgang Schirmacher, etc.
Taken to Tsar Alexander I of Russia, Vandamme was accused of looting, but is alleged to have replied, " I am neither a plunderer nor a brigand but in any case, my contemporaries and history will not reproach me for having soaked my hands in the blood of my father " ( an allusion to the murder of Paul I of Russia ).
Commonly-cited examples of dog-whistle politics include civil rights-era use of the phrase " forced busing ," used to enable a person to imply opposition to racial integration without them needing to say so explicitly ; the state of Georgia's adoption, in 1956, of a flag visually similar to the Confederate battle flag, itself understood by many to be a dog-whistle for racism ; the phrase " Southern strategy ," used by the Republican Party in the 1960s to describe plans to gain influence in the South by appealing to people's racism ; Ronald Reagan, on the campaign trail in 1980, saying in Mississippi " I believe in states ' rights " ( a sentence the New Statesman later described as " perhaps the archetypal dog-whistle statement "), described as implying Reagan believed that states should be allowed, if they want, to retain racial segregation ; Reagan's use of the term " welfare queens ," said to be designed to rouse racial resentment among white working-class voters against minorities ; a 2008 TV ad for Republican presidential candidate John McCain called " The One ," which observers said dog-whistled to evangelical Christians who believed Obama might be the Antichrist ; a Tea Party spokeswoman saying President Obama " doesn't love America like we do ," thought to be an allusion to Obama's race and to the birth certificate controversy, and Republicans frequently emphasizing Obama's middle name for the same reason ; an aide to 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney saying Romney would be a better President than Obama because Romney understood the " shared Anglo-Saxon heritage " of the United States and the United Kingdom ; former Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich and 2012 Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, and others, calling Obama " the food stamps president " said to be a way of exploiting stereotypes among racially resentful white voters who see food stamps as unearned giveaways to minorities.

0.426 seconds.