Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

X_Digger

(18,585 posts)
32. Meh. Not terribly complex, just typical Dickens.
Tue Nov 26, 2013, 08:14 PM
Nov 2013

If you don't read it like you would a modern sentence, and just keep with it like a stream of consciousness ramble- it makes sense.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I teach high school English. JimboBillyBubbaBob Nov 2013 #1
That would be terrific. MineralMan Nov 2013 #2
Late 19th Century English is gorgeous, imo. Laelth Nov 2013 #24
If you'd rather have an American Writer's sample, MineralMan Nov 2013 #6
Thank you... JimboBillyBubbaBob Nov 2013 #12
I think you must be an excellent teacher, my friend. MineralMan Nov 2013 #16
My daughter teaches English and reading comprehension RebelOne Nov 2013 #27
Look at how the meaning of "nice" has changed REP Nov 2013 #3
Well, "nice" has several definitions. MineralMan Nov 2013 #4
"That's nice!" KamaAina Nov 2013 #10
Yes, that's one interpretation of that two-word sentence. MineralMan Nov 2013 #13
It's no more difficult than some of Mark Twain's writings LadyHawkAZ Nov 2013 #5
My apologies. MineralMan Nov 2013 #9
No degree here. I just read a lot. LadyHawkAZ Nov 2013 #17
American notes is well worth the read, whether you like Dickens or not. Democracyinkind Nov 2013 #26
Thanks for the recommendation LadyHawkAZ Nov 2013 #31
If you want a copy, MineralMan Nov 2013 #44
That entire second paragraph consists of three sentences. KamaAina Nov 2013 #7
It does, indeed. MineralMan Nov 2013 #11
My first thought ... eppur_se_muova Nov 2013 #8
I love the cartoon at the link. MineralMan Nov 2013 #14
Yeah, I beleive that is why I like it. JimboBillyBubbaBob Nov 2013 #18
Sure has…but the past learns quickly…even ole Ichabod's got it mostly down, in 5 weeks, no less.. Tikki Nov 2013 #15
I can't read that XemaSab Nov 2013 #19
Thanks for taking the time. MineralMan Nov 2013 #38
But you did read it - and you did get it. enlightenment Nov 2013 #39
It's more than 140 characters... FarCenter Nov 2013 #20
It could be compressed into a tweet... hunter Nov 2013 #21
A link to a picture and a few emoticons. FarCenter Nov 2013 #22
"On ship. Cabin not as advertised. #BrittaniaCaptain #toosmall" LadyHawkAZ Nov 2013 #23
#swmbo pissed lumberjack_jeff Nov 2013 #35
Dreadfully inefficient since you only used 32 to pull out predictable dumb-kids-these-days snark. nt Posteritatis Nov 2013 #33
That's very poor writing by my standards. cpwm17 Nov 2013 #25
By your standards. MineralMan Nov 2013 #37
This is what ignore is for. nt cpwm17 Nov 2013 #42
I read the 2nd paragraph a few times but still have no idea what's being stated. Kaleva Nov 2013 #28
I still remember in high school (I graduated in 1961) reading pangaia Nov 2013 #29
Yup. Thanks. MineralMan Nov 2013 #36
Pfft, let's challenge the kids to a close reading of "Finnegan's Wake" Godhumor Nov 2013 #30
You're assuming there's actual meaning to be gleaned. ;) X_Digger Nov 2013 #34
A good friend of mine is a PhD in Lit - enlightenment Nov 2013 #40
Meh. Not terribly complex, just typical Dickens. X_Digger Nov 2013 #32
There is a huge change in literature from before folks went to movies pink-o Nov 2013 #41
Good point. nt MineralMan Nov 2013 #43
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»The English Language has ...»Reply #32