In this regard, the English possessive works quite differently from the genitive in say, German or Latin. The Queen of England’s lifetime, not the *Queen’s of England lifetime.
You know what I also hate about the Game of Thrones? They don't explain this Winter thing at all, at least not in the TV series. And they don't explain what's behind the wall or why it was erected.
Actually winter is here if you live in Massachusetts. If you live in The Song of Ice and Fire, winter isn't coming yet, and it isn't even breathing hard. Even after five books.
@Robusto Not sure. He routed the invading wildlings who were attacking the Wall at the end of Book 3, the last worth-reading book. He was snowed-in outside the walls of Winterfell at the end of Book 5. There is another chapter with him from the start of the next book — The Winds of Winter — that was released two Christmases ago.
@tchrist It's impossible to keep all the characters and threads together. I half gave up, but am current on the reading. I will probably read the next two if they ever get here, but only because I am a completionist.
Seriously, though, George R. R. Martin writes way too long. Compared to The Song of Ice and Fire, Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings feels like a novella.
The 87654-B convention is often used if a house (for example) is letting some rooms as an apartment. For example, I live at 16473, and the in-law apartment over the garage, which I let, has the address 16473-A. — Roddy of the Frozen Peas2 hours ago
TLotR has focus, it has direction, it has meaningful, intelligible conflict on many levels, and it has characters you don't get tired of. The only thing it lacks that Martin supplies is sex.
I like how filthy and harsh certain scenes and characters are in Martin's books; but I strongly dislike how they are describe in crude language, nor how they are often not very functional, at least not in the series.
@Cerberus The kind of dead-boring white-bread American straight men who believe they’re open-minded because they get off on girl-on-girl action, or have met a gay person once or twice in their lives. It doesn’t speak to anyone else, including women.
So I was at a friend's birthday party and she was giggling and telling us/reminding her husband playfully about how this one time she kissed a girl for his birthday.
And I was all like "yeah, and then?" interested, you know? And she just looked at me and there was this long pause while my brain slowly figured out that I was supposed to be shocked and titillated.
If you check, on Google Street View, places like Charleville Road, Tullamore; or Clara Road, Tullamore, you'll see that they're definitely urban areas, but none of the houses there have numbers. And most of them don't have names, either. The postman actually knows people's name.
Used to be that cabbies in London were required to know every street and its addresses before they were granted a license. Not sure if that's the case still.
Well, 1,000 cm/sec works out to 10 m/sec, which is slower than the slowest pitch in baseball, so I seriously doubt if it's comparable to any .22 caliber bullet.
When I did speak of some distressful stroke,
That my youth suffer'd, My story being done,
She gave me for my pains a world of sighs:
She swore, in faith, 'twas strange, 'twas passing strange,
'Twas pitiful, 'twas wondrous pitiful...
I have been developing flash applications to teach vocabulary. For this purpose, I need to classify vocabulary into main categories. So far I came up with these nodes
Basic Vocabulary
Collocations
Prefixes/Suffixes
Business Vocabulary
Academic Vocabulary
Idioms
Phrasals
And , they m...
Timon of Athens is a play by William Shakespeare about the fortunes of an Athenian named Timon (and probably influenced by the philosopher of the same name, as well), generally regarded as one of his most obscure and difficult works. Originally grouped with the tragedies, it is generally considered such, but some scholars group it with the problem plays.
Characters
*Timon : a lord of Athens.
*Alcibiades ): Captain of a military brigade and good friend to Timon.
*Apemantus, sometimes spelled Apermantus, a philosopher and churl.
*Flavius is Timon's chief Steward.
*Flaminius is one o...
Seriously, I guess I was wrong. @Cerb can't eat things he doesn't know about.
I have been developing flash applications to teach vocabulary. For this purpose, I need to classify vocabulary into main categories. So far I came up with these nodes
Basic Vocabulary
Collocations
Prefixes/Suffixes
Business Vocabulary
Academic Vocabulary
Idioms
Phrasals
And , they m...
No I don't, but I'm still interested in the discussion. But the main site is (by culture) off limits, chat just wouldn't work, the blog is terrible for discussion...I want to go back to alt.usage.english!!
@Cerberus I reject your challenge and reject your rejection of the challenge.