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"Drudg'd, Disturb'd, Rebuk't, Fledg'd . . . by leaving out a Vowel to save a Syllable, we form so jarring a Sound, and so difficult to utter, that I have often wondered how it could ever obtain." http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/jun/07/folly-of-embalming-english-language http://tinyurl.com/39xkssc "...the Queen's English Society is to set up an Academy of English. It will pronounce     

Group: alt.usage.english · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in alt.usage.english
Author: John Dean
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:50

On Jun 8, 9:20 am, Peter Groves <metrical...@gmail.com> wrote: On Jun 8, 10:59 am,spinoza1111<spinoza1...@yahoo.com> wrote: On Jun 8, 7:03 am, Peter Groves <metrical...@gmail.com> wrote: On Jun 8, 12:59 am,spinoza1111<spinoza1...@yahoo.com> wrote: On Jun 7, 8:22 pm, "bobgrum...@nut-n-but.net" <bobgrum...@nut-n- but.net> wrote: Spinosa's
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On 08/06/2010 11:32, Kevan Smith wrote: > On 6/8/10 5:22 AM, Nobody wrote: >> On 08/06/2010 11:19, Kevan Smith wrote: >>> On 6/8/10 4:43 AM, Nobody wrote: >>>> Here's one of the 'many' occasions that I tried to be a constructive >>>> part of this group. >>> >>> Hey, Gary. Nice "suicide." >>> >> >> >> Did you understand the meaning, Yoko? Or was it all in vain? > > "Tomorrow and tomorrow     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: spinoza1111
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:48

On Mon, 7 Jun 2010 10:27:20 -0400, James Silverton wrote: Hello All! Here's another question: I believe it is "Reggio Parmegiane" cheese when made in its home but how do you pronounce "Parmesan" (spelt that way)? PAR-m@-zahn First syllable as in Parma, third syllable with the vowel of father. Of course, I don't pronounce it often because I prefer Romano. -- Stan Brown
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On Jun 8, 9:20 am, Peter Groves <metrical...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 8, 10:59 am,spinoza1111<spinoza1...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Jun 8, 7:03 am, Peter Groves <metrical...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Jun 8, 12:59 am,spinoza1111<spinoza1...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 7, 8:22 pm, "bobgrum...@nut-n-but.net" <bobgrum...@nut-n- > > > > > but.net> wrote: > > > > > Spinosa's     

Group: alt.music.pinkfloyd · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in alt.music.pinkfloyd
Author: Nobody
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:46

On Jun 8, 4:52 pm, "Peter F." <pete...@rey.prestel.co.uk> wrote: On 8 June, 05:59, Peter Groves <metrical...@gmail.com> wrote: On Jun 7, 8:31 pm, "Peter F." <pete...@rey.prestel.co.uk> wrote: No last for me nor second coming creed. Senseless use of "creed" for a cheap rhyme. Pierian fountains lifted me above Pretentious classical reference: Marlowe at
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On 6/8/10 5:22 AM, Nobody wrote: > On 08/06/2010 11:19, Kevan Smith wrote: >> On 6/8/10 4:43 AM, Nobody wrote: >>> Here's one of the 'many' occasions that I tried to be a constructive >>> part of this group. >> >> Hey, Gary. Nice "suicide." >> > > > Did you understand the meaning, Yoko? Or was it all in vain? "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow, Creeps in this petty pace from     

Group: alt.usage.english · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in alt.usage.english
Author: Stan Brown
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:37

On 8/06/10 5:38 PM, in article d9de6190-3e20-4881-98e8-d64e7d0d6bb8@b35g2000yqi.googlegroups.com, "Franz Gnaedinger" <frgn@bluemail.ch> wrote: There can't be a sonnet 155, for the number 154 of the actual sonnets refers to the Italian sonnet invented by the Sicilian poet Giacomo da Lentini. An Italian sonnet has fourteen lines of eleven pronounced syllables each, usually
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> There can't be a sonnet 155, for the number 154 > of the actual sonnets refers to the Italian sonnet > invented by the Sicilian poet Giacomo da Lentini. > An Italian sonnet has fourteen lines of eleven > pronounced syllables each, usually 8 plus 3 plus 3 > lines. 25 sonnets are ascribed to Giacomo da Lentini > and have these riming patterns > >     ABABABAB CDECDE     14 sonnets >     ABABABAB     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: spinoza1111
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:37

On Jun 6, 9:53�pm, Joy Beeson <jbee...@invalid.net.invalid> wrote: On Sat, 29 May 2010 11:36:45 -0700 (PDT), aquachimp <aquach...@aquachimp.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: Used instead of "keep this to yourself," �I've recently encountered "keep this personally". Somehow it �doesn't seem right. If the speaker means anything other than "don't delegate the keeping of this; do
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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: spinoza1111
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:35

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Group: alt.music.pinkfloyd · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in alt.music.pinkfloyd
Author: Kevan Smith
Date: Jun 8, 2010 03:32

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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: ignoto
Date: Jun 8, 2010 00:52

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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: Franz Gnaedinger
Date: Jun 8, 2010 00:38

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Group: alt.usage.english · Group Profile · Search for Syllabls in alt.usage.english
Author: Arcadian Rises
Date: Jun 7, 2010 19:47

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