Friday, March 20, 2020

The eNotes Blog Beautiful Bookish Advertisements From Israel’s Oldest BookstoreChain

Beautiful Bookish Advertisements From Israel’s Oldest BookstoreChain Steimatzky, founded way back in 1925 in Tel-Aviv,  collaborated with GREY Group ad agency in 2013 to create ads that captured the imaginative nature and adventure  of books. They feature the readers falling asleep and sweetly snoozing next to their novels characters. These even make taking a nap with Stalin look charming! Check them out, and let us know your favorites (or books/characters that would make compelling ads  you think they missed)  in the comments! Harry Potter IMHO but thats always a given with me. The Fellowship of the Ring   by J.R.R. Tolkein The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari   by  Robin Sharma Pippi Longstocking   by  Astrid Lindgren Stalin: A Biography   by Robin Service The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes   by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Don Quixote   by  Miguel De Cervantes and Edith Grossman and this (kind of horrifying, yet effective) anti-ad for television. Hopefully HBO and Netflix Original Series are immune, otherwise were all probably doomed for this unfortunate tiny head  disease.

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Monosyllable - Definition and Examples

Monosyllable s A monosyllable is a  word or an utterance of one syllable. Adjective: monosyllabic. Contrast with  polysyllable.   In linguistics, monosyllables are most commonly studied in the fields of phonology  and morphology. Unlike a lexical monosyllable (such as dog, run, or big), a grammatical (or functional) monosyllable (such as the definite article the) has no semantic content. Etymology:  From the Greek, one syllable Examples and Observations For what do we live, but to make sport for our neighbors, and laugh at them in our turn?(Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, 1813)[M]any of the finest passages in our language are nearly, if not altogether, monosyllabic. Indeed, it could not well be otherwise, if it be true that, as Dean Swift has remarked, the English language is overstocked with monosyllables. . . . Floy has written a lengthy and very ingenious article, entirely in monosyllables, in which he undertakes, as he says, to prove that short words, in spite of the sneer in the text, need not creep, nor be dull, but that they give strength, and life, and fire to the verse of those who know how to use them.(Gleanings From the Harvest-Fields of Literature, Science and Art: A Melange of Excerpta, Curious, Humorous, and Instructive, edited by Charles C. Bombaugh. T. Newton Kurtz, 1860) Small words can be crisp, brief, tersego to the point, like a knife. They have a charm all their own. They dance, twist, turn, sing. Like sparks in the night, they light the way for the eyes of those who read. They are the grace notes of prose. You know what they say the way you know a day is bright and fairat first sight. And you find, as you read, that you like the way they say it. Small words are gay. And they can catch large thoughts and hold them up for all to see, like rare stones in rings of gold, or joy in the eyes of a child. Some make you feel, as well as see: the cold deep dark of night, the hot salt sting of tears.(Joseph Ecclesine, Advice to Scientistsin Words of One Syllable. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 1965)Good friend, thou hast no cause to say so yet;But thou shalt have; and creep time neer so slow,Yet it shall come, for me to do thee good.I had a thing to say. But let it go.​(William Shakespeare, King John Act III, scene 3)And God said, Let t here be light: and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good.(Genesis I) Lifes more than breath, and the quick round of bloodWe live in deeds, not years; in thoughts, not breathsWe should count time by heart-throbs. He most livesWho thinks mostfeels the noblestacts the best.Lifes but a means unto an end.(Philip James Bailey, Festus, 1839) The Lighter Side of Monosyllables Louisa Glasson:  Underneath the gruff,   monosyllabic, well-meaning but rude person, youre . . . gruff, monosyllabic, and, well, rude.Dr. Martin Ellingham:  What about well-meaning? ​(Caroline Catz and Martin Clunes, Erotomania.  Doc Martin, 2006) Pronunciation: MON-oh-sil-eh-bel