Jane Austen's EmmaSydney University Press, 1968 - 132 من الصفحات A novel about youthful hubris and romantic misunderstandings. It is set in the fictional country village of Highbury and the surrounding estates of Hartfield, Randalls and Donwell Abbey, and involves the relationships among people from a small number of families. |
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النتائج 1-3 من 13
الصفحة 11
... allowed to prejudice Mr Knightley's office as moral standard . So long as these and wider doubts are set aside , so long as Mr Knightley's obvious personal merits are used for raising him to the author's pedestal , so long as the reader ...
... allowed to prejudice Mr Knightley's office as moral standard . So long as these and wider doubts are set aside , so long as Mr Knightley's obvious personal merits are used for raising him to the author's pedestal , so long as the reader ...
الصفحة 31
... allowed to take Emma as seriously as she takes herself when , for instance , she shuts her new discoveries about Robert Martin quite out of her mind : " it would be a small consola- tion to her , for the clownish manner which might be ...
... allowed to take Emma as seriously as she takes herself when , for instance , she shuts her new discoveries about Robert Martin quite out of her mind : " it would be a small consola- tion to her , for the clownish manner which might be ...
الصفحة 86
... allowed intrude . This being so , the business of distinguishing , moment by moment , what he is about ( which makes part of one's pleasure as a reader - or , presumably , a re - reader ) need not occupy us here . Let us confine ...
... allowed intrude . This being so , the business of distinguishing , moment by moment , what he is about ( which makes part of one's pleasure as a reader - or , presumably , a re - reader ) need not occupy us here . Let us confine ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
A. C. Bradley admiration admits amiable amusement antithesis attention attitude Bateses behaviour believe Box Hill brother certainly Chapman chapter character Churchill's conversation critics dear declares discover dislike Dixon doubt elegance Elton Emma Woodhouse Emma's fancy father feelings Frank Churchill growing happiness Harriet Smith Hartfield Highbury hope ignorance imagination interest irony Isabella Jane Austen Jane Fairfax John Knightley Johnson judgement Knightley's less letter London look manner Mansfield Park marriage marry Marvin Mudrick means mind Miss Bates Miss Fairfax Miss Taylor Miss Woodhouse motives narrator speaks narrator's natural never Northanger Abbey novel obliged occasion opinion Oxford English Dictionary passage phrase pleasure praise Pride and Prejudice Professor quarrel question Randalls rational reason regard remarks replies Robert Martin seems sense sensible smile snobbery soon suggest suppose talk tells thing thought tion truth Weston Weymouth wish woman word young