- her
inclined to "hit too hard" in comedy.
Hallam Tennyson felt "she over-
elocuted: she was the last
trace of the Irving-Terry era in
which the important...
-
Norway altogether.
Speculum Regale Islandi****
after Thormodus Torfæus, as
elocuted by Egede. The
Speculum contains a
detailed digression about whales and...
-
etymology of
kobelt deriving from kobel,
which Mathesius does not
quite elocute, was
explicitly articulated by
Johannes Beckmann in Beiträge zur Geschichte...
- was
presented by Fred
Rogers in a quiet, methodical, loving, and
highly elocuted manner. In the sketch,
Eddie Murphy's character,
named "Mister Robinson"...
- bone china,
gazing into the
camera with
kohled eyes and, in
perfect TEFL-
elocuted Euro-English,
imploring you: SHUT UP...AND
SLEEP WITH ME."
There was also...
- (from
Latin stem edere, to
bring forth)
electrocute from
electrocution elocute from
elocution emote from
emotion enthuse from
enthusiasm escalate from...
- 1965,
Hartley was
impatient over how Larkin's
poems were read by over-
elocuted actors on the BBC
Third Programme that she and her
husband formed the record...
-
people needed to do to
overcome their low
status in society. She also
elocuted that
women not
stand for the poor
treatment they
received from men, black...
-
Missouri Review's 2016
Miller Audio Prize Contest for his poem "Watch us
Elocute",
originally published in the
Boston Review. Wicker's
second collection...
- the
quartet rings and toots, Doth
Coyla charm her hearers, as she
coyly elocutes. —
Edwin W****s, "Coyla May Spring" In the 1920s,
Spring sang on
radio programs...