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What he got was a whack from the Wave he had wed.


4. I saw thee weep - the big bright tear
Came o'er that eye of blue;

And then methought it did appear

A violet dropping dew. (Byron)


5. But any man that walks the mead,
In bud, or blade, or bloom, may find,
According as his humours lead,

A meaning suited to his mind. (Tennyson)


6. Softly sweet, in Lydian measures

Soon he soothed his soul to pleasures. (Dryden)


7. I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers,
From the seas and the streams;

I bear light shade for the leaves when laid

In their noonday dreams. (Shelly)


8. О that those lips had language! Life has passed
With me but roughly since I heard thee last.
(Cowper)


Assignment 3. Analyse instrumentation and graphic means in the following:

  1. There she sees a damsel bright, Drest in a silken robe of white. (Col­eridge)

  2. E'en from the tomb the voice of Nature cries, E'en in our ashes live their wanted fires. (Gray)

  1. Full fathom five thy father lies. (Shakespeare)

The worth of that (-my mortal self) is that which it contains

And that is this (-this sonnet), and this with thee remains. (Shakespeare)

  1. West winds, wanton wind, wilful wind, womanish winds, false wind from over the water, will you never blow again? (Shaw)

  2. And the silken sad uncertain rustling of each purple curtain Thrilled me - filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before. (Poe)

  3. "Tutor?" he cried. "Tewtor? TerYEWtor?" (Wodehouse)

  4. "Silence! Silen-n-n-n-nce!" (Shaw)

  5. "Fact is, ol' man, they were drunk, yes, dr-r-unk." (Priestley)

  6. "But you ought to have it. If he takes it away from you he's unjust." (Bennett)

  7. "Oh! I do hate the telephone." (Wilson)

  8. "Wassa matter?"

"Hell I dunno. ... One о them automoebile riots I guess. Aint you read the paper? I don't blame em do you?" (Dos Passos)

  1. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling, faintly through universe and faintly falling like the descent of their last end, upon the living and the dead. (J. Joyce)

  2. From the morn to the night, he's so joyous and bright, And he bubbles with wit and good humour! (Gilbert)

  3. Leaves

Murmuring by myriads in the shimmering trees

Lives

Wakening with wonder in Pyrenees.

Birds

Cheering chirping in the early day.

Bards

Singing of summer scything thro' the hay. (Owen)

15. "They've killed him, those vile, filthy foreigners. My baby son."Sam Browne, still mystified, read the telegram. He then stood to attention, saluted (although not wearing a cap), and said solemnly: "A clean sportin' death, an Englishman's death."

(When Huns were killed it was neither clean nor sportin', but served the beggars - (".........," among men) - right. ) (Aldridge)

  1. "AS - I - WAS - SAYING," said Eyore loudly and sternly, "as I was saying when I was interrupted by various Loud Sounds, I feel that - " (Milne)

  2. The trouble with a kitten is

THAT

Eventually it becomes a

CAT. (Nash)


Seminars No 6, 7

Lexico-semantic Expressive Means

and Stylistic Devices: Figures Of Substitution


  • Figures of speech

Pick out and name the figures of speech used in these statements.

  • Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?

  • She was thrilled to bits when she heard the news.

  • The sky looked like black velvet.

  • 'Sit still!' she hissed.

  • The chancellor will steer the economy through these choppy waters.

  • He was over the moon when the team scored.


  • Metaphors

Which key word creates the metaphor in these statements? [See if you can also identify its grammatical function].

  • Don't think you can come waltzing in here.

  • He was a wizard with figures.

  • Wipe that smile off your face right now.

  • You are my sunshine.

  • That junction's always a bottleneck.

  • The road was a ribbon of moonlight.


  • Metonymy

Identify any metonymy in the following statements.

  • The pound has risen in strength today against the dollar.

  • It's about time you put your foot down.

  • The bench has decreed that the case be dismissed.

  • Japan is sometimes referred to as the land of the rising sun.

  • The whole city will welcome this grant from the government.

  • 'In all of Homer, there is no finer view of Greece than this.'


  • Synecdoche

Pick out any examples of synecdoche in the following statements.

  • England lost the Ashes in 1997.

  • In the estuary there appeared a fleet of fifty sail.

  • The Church has declared that abortion is a sin.

  • Fifty head of cattle were sold at auction yesterday.

  • "You won't find any jokers in this pack."

  • Everton scored in extra time to win the Cup.


  • Irony

Decide if these statements are ironic or not.

"So you've lost the books I lent you? Well, that's wonderful!"

"She gave us a two-hour lecture on how to make a cup of tea. It was really fascinating."

"We can't select you for the play. It doesn't feature simpletons."

"Yes, put the baby next to the fire. That will be the safest place."

"Don't look at me in that way - unless you want a thick ear!"

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a man in possession of a for­tune must be in want of a wife.



Assignment 1. Match each figure of quantity with its main stylistic feature:

  1. Hyperbole. 2. Meiosis. 3. Litotes.


  1. positive sense of a structure with double negation;

  2. a deliberate exaggeration;

  3. a deliberate diminution.


Assignment 2. Indicate separately the cases of: a) hyperbole; b) meiosis; c) litotes:

1. English and American hands were as scarce as hen's teeth in this unhealthy place. (W. Foster). 2. He would give the world for her fair eyes. 3. Dear aunt, you frightened me out of my senses. (H. Fielding). 4. A smile crossed Natt's face from ear to ear. (H. Caine). 5. An unfortunate man would be drowned in a tea-cup. 6. A watched pot never boils. 7. He said: "I thought I'd come up and have a word with you, father." (A. Cronin). 8. I have not seen you for ages. 9. To write a novel is as simple for him as falling off a chair, I suppose. 10. You make noise enough to wake the dead. 11. We'll be back in three shakes of a dead lamb's tail. (J. Conroy). 12. He seemed to me to be frightened all to pieces. (A. Doyle). 13. I don't speak empty words. 14. It hadn't been for nothing after all. 14. No man is indispensable. 15. These cabins aren't half bad. (H. Wells). 16. Nothing is impossible to a willing heart. 17. I've had such a lot of worry lately that I don't know whether I'm on my head or heels. (H. Lawson). 18. And the floors! They haven't seen water for ages. (J. Steele). 19. An old dog barks not in vain. 20. "Well, that's not a bad idea," he said finally. (M. Wilson). 21. He proceeded very slowly and cau­tiously, an inch at a time. (J. London). 22. He was a good-for-nothing fellow. 23.1 wouldn't say it is beyond your purse to buy that book.


Assignment 3. Match each metonymic figure of quality with its main stylistic feature:

  1. Metonymy. 2. Synecdoche. 3. Periphrasis. 4. Euphemism.

  1. replacement of a direct name of a thing/phenomenon by the description of some of its quality;

  2. naming the whole object by mentioning part of it, or naming a constitu­ent part by mentioning the whole object;

  3. replacement of an unpleasant, impolite word or expression with a mild­er and decent one;

  4. transference of a name of one object to another based upon contiguity.

Assignment 4. Match each metaphoric figure of quality with its main stylistic feature:

1. Metaphor. 2. Epithet. 3. Antonomasia. 4. Personification. 5. Allegory.

a) an attribute describing an object expressively, pointing out an implied figurative connotation;

  1. an abstract notion in a concrete image, embodied throughout a whole text, often possessing the features of a human being and having its proper name;

  2. transference of a name of one object to another based on similarity;

  3. usage of common nouns as proper names based on similarity of quali­ties, or usage of proper names as common nouns;

  4. ascribing human behaviour, feelings, thoughts and actions to inanimate objects.


Assignment 5. Match the periphrases with the notions they rep­resent:

I. 1) a gentleman in brown a) Satan

  1. a gentleman in black b) a bug, bed-bug, clinch

  2. a gentleman/ knight of industry c) God

  3. a gentleman of the (long) robe d) a swindler

  4. the Father of Lights e) a lawyer, judge (the king of glory/ heaven)


II. 1) the Father of Rivers/ Waters a) a soldier military man

  1. a daughter of the soil b) a woman

  2. a daughter of Eve c) the Nile

  3. a daughter of Jezebel d) a peasant woman

  4. a son of Mars e) a an impudent woman


III. 1) a son of the Nile a) an eagle

  1. a son of Vulcan b) a tavern-keeper

  2. a son/ knight of the Spigot c) death

  3. the king of birds d) a crocodile

  4. the king of terrors e) a (black)smith, farrier


IV. 1) the king of the sea a) the sun

  1. the king of beasts b) an adventurer, gambler

  2. the king of day c) a tramp, vagrant, hobo

  3. a knight of fortune d) herring

  4. a knight of the field e) a lion


V. 1) a knight of the pen/ pencil/ quill a) a cowardice

  1. fires of heaven b) a writer, journalist, clerk

  2. old moustache c) stock exchange

  3. the arena of the bears and bulls d) stars

  4. cold feet e) a veteran



Assignment 6. State the kind of the periphrasis: a) logical; b) met-onymic; c) metaphoric. Explain what is implied:

1. He was a mere adventurer, a man, who out of office must live by his pen. (Th. Macanlay). 2. He is now under fifteen, and an old limb of the law. (Ch. Dickens). 3. Learning is the eye of the mind. 4.1 am desperately fond of her: she is the light of my eyes. (Ch. BrontJ. 5. Soldiers are citizens of death's gray land, drawing no dividend from time's tomorrows. (S. Sassoon). 6. Sui­cide note: The calm, cool face of the river asked me for a kiss. (L. Hughes). 7. Red cock will crow in his house. 8. "Of what profession is Mr. Archer?" "Of the Corporation of the Goosequil - of the Press, my boy," said War­rington. (W. Thackeray). 9. Neither of them had a word to throw to a dog. 10. You are scarcely out of the shell yet. 11. The woman was a walking corpse. 12. Bacchus has drowned more men than Neptune. 13. He is an open book. 14. She's the skeleton in the family cupboard. 15. She distrusted old heads on young shoulders. (H. Walpole). 16. I know she has a sweet tooth still in her head. (M. Edgeworth). 17. He had a warm place in his heart for dogs. (M. Twain). 18. Jack was afraid they were going to ease him of his purse. 19. John was too much of an afternoon farmer to carry the business successfully. (J. Dixon). 20.1 thought it wise to keep that sum for a rainy day. 21. He is not going to depart this life. I suppose. 22. Geargel had been nearly six years upon the throne. (W. Ainsworth). 23. Keep a civil tongue, or I'll throw you to the crowd. (J. Galsworthy). 24. Here in Montreal she was a fish out of water. (Th. Dreiser). 25. A forgetful head makes a weary pair of heels. 26. He is disadvantaged, underprivileged - he still doesn't have a dime. 27. In the real world of political compromise, few hats are all white. (W. Safire "Safire's Political Dictionary"). 28. It is nothing to say that he hadn't a word to throw at a dog. (Ch. Dickens). 29. "I'm running a nut house." He rubbed his hand over his bald dome. 30. Soon he will pay his debt to nature. 31.1 wish I were under the turf. 32. "Go and take a nice big jump in the lake and forget to come out." says the truck driver. (J. Steele). 33. I was pretty much of a green-horn. I guess. 34. She suddenly took to her heels. (Th. Hardy). 35. Charles Bates expressed his opinion that it was the time to pad the hoof. (Ch. Di­ckens). 36. Snawley himself can tell that this is not his son, and that his son is food for worms. (Ch. Dickens). 37. In your chair days you will understand all your vanity. 38. The grocery store on the corner, half a block from where mother lived, changed hands. (J. London). 39. You know the Blakes next door but one. Only last week they flitted between the moon and the milkman. (J. Lindsay).



Assignment 7. Supply the missing words from the list below. De­fine the types of metaphor: 1) dead/original; 2) nominative/cognitive/ imaginative; 3) simple/sustained:

1. Then we'll ..... an hour in the lounge. (A. Cronin). 2. Hunger ..... stone walls. 3. When ..... enters the door, love will fly out of the window. 4. His heart was ..... with sympathetic tenderness. (J. London). 5. In a little district west of Washington Square the streets ..... and broken themselves into small strips called "places." (O'Henry)

a) poverty; b) kill; c) have run crazy; d) melting; e) breaks


Assignment 8. Define types (associated I unassociated; simple I com­pound I phrasal I clausal) and paraphrase the epithets in the context:

1. Well, haven't you always advocated a kid-glove policy? (D. Carter). 2. Never such a cat-and-dog life as they've been leading ever since! (Th. Hardy). 3. She gave him a penny-in-the-slot smile. (D. Bullett). 4. Does he really think that I will follow his hole-in-the-head advice? 5. As I've often told you, I'm a dyed-in-the-grain Liberal with no confidence in the Liberal Party. (J. Lindsay). 6. My Lady Dedlock fell not into the melting, but rather into a freezing mood. (Ch. Dickens). 7. Europe's new dead-end generation has lost faith in the future. (Newsweek). 8. Mine has been comparatively but a lotus-eating existence hitherto; to-morrow I begin the battle of life. (E. Yates). 9. My rascals are not milk-and-water rascals, I promise you. (W. Thackeray). 10. She didn't like his gin-and-water voice. 11. A green wound is soon healed. 12. The baculine method was a quite common mode of argument in those days. (W. Thackeray).



Assignment 9. Point out metaphor among metonymy. Define its stylistic function in each case:

1. How to earn daily bread by my pen was then the problem. (B. Shaw). 2. A loose tongue wagged spitefully outside the hospital. (A. Cronin). 3. He bears no malice for you or your relatives. 4. The pen is mightier than the sword. 5. Proverbs are the wisdom of the streets. 6. As things were he had to put his pride in his pocket - he couldn't quarrel with his bread and butter. (A. Cronin). 7. Fortune gives her hand to a bold man. 8. It's well known, isn't it, that her circle is very free and easy. (J. Galsworthy). 9. We're badly in need of new blood. (A. Cronin). 10. His tongue failed him. 11. How is the world treating you? 12. Hungry bellies have no ears. 13. Idleness is the moth­er of all evil. 14. Misfortunes come on wings and depart on foot. 15. The captain was ashore, where he had been engaging some new hands to make up his full crew.


Assignment 10. Point out metonymy among metaphor. Define its stylistic function in each case:

1. Father is a treasure, a brother is a comfort, but a friend is both. 2. Pat's got somebody in her mind's eye. (K. S. Prichard). 3. The heart that once truly loves never forgets. 4. The heads of the church and State reaped only that which they had sown. (Th. Macaulay). 5. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. 6. He was tolerably stricken in years by this time. (Ch. Dickens). 7. The servant answered the bell. 8. An enemy's mouth seldom speaks well. 9. He's hand in glove with you against me. (A. Cronin). 10. We're ruled by the inven­tors and human nature, and we live in Queer Street, Mr. Desert. (J. Galswor­thy). 11. Young man, you're ready with your tongue. (D. Cusack). 12. The company found their tongues at last. (H. Caine). 13. Flesh and blood could not stand the strain. (A. Doyle). 14.1 saw him down at the hotel shouting the drinks for Sam. I think he's pretty fond of the bottle now. (J. Aldridge). 15. Oh, and the next two hours tripped by on rosy wings.

Seminar No 8

Lexico-semantic Expressive Means

and Stylistic Devices: Figures of Combination


  • Similes

Which of the following statements contain similes?

  • It was as flat as a pancake.

  • There was as much as you could eat.

  • She was as bright as a button.

  • As if I would do a thing like that!

  • Where the bee sucks, there suck I.

  • О my love is like a red, red rose.


  • Oxymoron

Which of these statements contain oxymoron?.

  • No light, but rather darkness visible.

  • 'I like a smuggler. He's the only honest thief.'

  • He was condemned to a living death.

  • Here's much to do with hate, but more with love. Why then, О brawling love! О loving hate!

  • "Make mine a wiskey sour, please!"

  • The shackles of an old love straiten'd him,His honour rooted in dishonour stood,And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.


  • Paradox

Which of these statements contain a paradox?

A mixture of sound and silence pervades the shady part of the wood.

She's got her knickers in a twist over this issue.

A libel may be all the more a libel, for being true.

A paradox is simply that which contradicts popular opinion or which in too many cases is a false opinion.

The dullness of the book is increased in proportion to the density, and it becomes ten times more tedious by its compression.

He has a powerful weakness for drink.



Assignment 1. Match each figure of combination with its main stylistic feature:

1. Simile. 2. Synonyms. 3. Oxymoron. 4. Antithesis. 5. Climax. 6. Anti­climax. 7. Zeugma. 8. Pun.

  1. a figure of ascending arrangement of emotional, qualitative, or quanti­tative features of the referent under description;

  1. a figure of contrast at the level of two semantically opposite phrases;

  2. identity is expressed in the words with similar meanings;

  3. a play on homonymic or polysemantic words;

  1. a figure of identity consisting in expressive comparison of two belong­ing to different semantic classes objects which have something in common;

  1. a figure of inequality realised in decreasing significance, importance or emotional tension of narration;

  2. a figure of contrast based on the combination of semantically incom­patible, almost antonymous words describing one referent;

h) an at least three-component figure of inequality, in which the basic component forms with the adjacent ones both a metaphoric expression and a free word combination.


Assignment 2. Pick out the appropriate comparative expressions from the a-e list below. Explain the stylistic function of each simile. Define other stylistic devices:

I.

  1. "Hurrah, hurrah!" Ramage bellowed ..... waving his arms. (A. Cronin).

  1. He'd only have to take one look at Jan to be convinced in his honest old heart that his son was lower ..... (D. Cusack).

  1. Tom is raving, running about ..... (F. Danby).

  2. But the long seconds went by and she was as still ...... (M. Wilson).

  1. I should have thought you would have got on with these young folks like ..... . (Ch. Yonge).


a) than a snake's belly; b) like a house on fire; c) as ice; d) like a bear with a sore head; e) like a bull


II.

  1. "What's that?" cried Brodie, turning ..... (A. Cronin).

  2. The creature was as lithe ..... and as active ..... .(Н. Beecher Stowe).

  3. Why, you're shaking ..... now because I mentioned his name! (E. Voynich). 4.1 will be as silent ..... . (B. Show).

5. This was now a road of ice five miles long, smooth ..... , and all but as straight ..... . (H. Caine).


a) as glass ... as an arrow; b) like a leaf; c) like a flash; d) as a cat... as a monkey; e) as the grave


III.

  1. I should be no guide to you, for we are as different ..... . (E. Lyall).

  2. March comes in ..... and goes out ..... .

  3. Be you soft ..... and cunning ..... (R. Aldington).

  1. It [i. e. the talk] rolled off his mental sphere .....

  2. He is as dead ..... .


a) as a door-nail; b) like water off the feathers of a duck; c) as doves ... as serpents; d) like a lion ... like a lamb; e) as chalk and cheese

IV.

  1. This hand-to-mouth existence kept him as thin ...... (J. Galsworthy).

  2. Dave's voice drew the others ..... (D. Carter).

  3. Your father was as like you are now ..... (A. Cronin).

4.1 can't believe this is true. It sounds ..... to me. (A. Cronin).

5. And his boss is as crooked ..... . (K. S. Prichard).


a) as two peas in a pod; b) like complete cock-and-bull yarn; c) as a dog's hind leg; d) like a magnet; e) as a rail


V.

  1. Your attention is as good for him .....

  2. And all of a sudden he went as dumb ..... (J. Galsworthy).

  3. І should stick to it ..... for my own sake. (G. Eliot).

  1. Anyway, he is as blind .....

  2. Curses ..... come home to roost.


a) like a flea to fleece; b) as a bat; c) as a fish; d) like chickens; e) as a shoulder of mutton to a sick horse


Assignment 3. Paraphrase the following cases of simile, indicate positive or negative connotation:

1) like a squirrel in a cage; 2) (as) light as a butterfly; 3) (as) fussy as a hen with one chick; 4) (as) gaunt as a grey-hound/ as bone; 5) (as) gaudy as a peacock; 6) (as) gentle as a lamb; 7) like a boiled rag; 8) like a fighting-cock; 9) like a fish out of water; 10) like a million dollars; 11) (as) firm/ steady as a rock; 12) like swine; 13) (as) clear as mud; 14) (as) black as a thunder cloud; 15) (as) fleet as a deer.


Assignment 4. Out of the following expressions determine those, which represent: 1) oxymoron; 2) antithesis. Point out other stylistic devices:

1. A little body often harbours a great soul. 2. Sprinting towards the elevator he felt amazed at his own cowardly courage. 3. Little pigeons can carry great messages. 4. To know everything is to know nothing. 5. The play was awfully funny. 6. She pleased his eyes and plagued his heart. 7. The pleasures of the mighty are the tears of the poor. 8. A friend to all is a friend to none. 9. A joke never gains an enemy but often loses a friend. 10. The garage was full of nothing. 11. The furthest way about is the nearest way home. 12. False friends are worse than open enemies. 13. He is so full of himself that he is quite empty. 14. There's a change coming, Erik. Any blind man can see that. 15. Old Jolyon seemed master of perennial youth. 16. The fool does think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. 17. Good words cost nothing and are worth much. 18. Better a lean peace than a fat victory. 19. Cheapest is the dearest. 20. Better a glorious death than a shameful life. 21. The newly planted trees wouldn't stand the gentle violence of the wind. 22. The speaking silence grew oppressive. 23. The picture was horribly beautiful. 24. Don't use big words. They mean so little.



Assignment 5. Choose from the a-e list the appropriate for pun words, missing in the sentences. Point out the key words of pun:

  1. "Are the tires on the car ..... ?" - "No, two of them are left."

  2. "Son, are you pursuing your studies faithfully?" - "Yes, indeed, father. I'm always .....

  3. "If you were in Africa and saw a lion coming, what steps would you take?" – „.....

  4. "Is it a board school you go to, my dear?" - "No, sir. I believe it is ....."

  5. "Papa, what kind of a robber is ..... ?" - "A what?" - "It says here that two pages held up the bride's train."

a) brick; b) behind; c) a page; d) the longest; e) all right


Assignment 6. Suggest the missing parts of the humorous re­plies based on pun of the meanings of the underlined words:

  1. "Hasn't Harvey ever married?" - "... , because he's studying for a bachelor's degree."

  2. "Did you have any luck, hunting tigers in India?" - "... Didn't come across a single tiger."

  3. "What, your son is an undertaker? I thought you said he was a doc­tor?" - "No, I said he followed ..."

  1. "What is the meaning of the word 'matrimony'?" - "Father says it..., it's a sentence."

  2. "What model is his car?" -"...; it's a horrible example."


Assignment 7. Distinguish between: 1) irony; 2) zeugma; 3) pun. Point out other stylistic devices:

1. For my own part, I swim like a stone. 2. Joe's been putting two and two together to make a million. 3. Bookcases covering one wall boasted a half-shelf of literature. 4. "Lord Henry, I am not at all surprised that the world says that you are extremely wicked." - "But what world says that?" asked Lord Henry, elevating his eyebrows. "It can only be the next world. This world and I are on excellent terms." 5. Last time it was a nice, simple, Euro­pean-style war. 6. Your project is just fit for the wastepaper basket. 7. He is really now a gentleman of the three outs: out of pocket, out of elbow, out of credit. 8. Yes, he is my blood cousin, seven times removed. 9. Telling of a member expelled from her club, a woman said: "They dismembered her." 10. "Unmaried?" - "Twice." 11. The quickest way to break a bad habit is to drop it. 12. The man who is always asking for a loan is always left alone. 13. Father to daughter's suitor: "My daughter says you have that certain something, but I wish you had something certain!" 14. (She, tearfully) -"You said if I'd marry you you'd be humbly grateful." - (He, sourly) - "Well, what of it?" - (She) - "You're not; you're grumbly hateful." 15. (an epitaph on Sir John Strange) Here lies an honest lawyer, and that is Strange.

Supplement Assignment. Analyse the following figures of substi­tution and combination:

1. The whole lobby was empty. It smelled like fifty million dead cigars. 2. Somebody knocked on the door, and when I went to open it, I fell over my suitcase. I always pick a gorgeous time to fall over a suitcase or something. 3.1 dropped about a thousand hints but I couldn't get rid of him. 4. He was two years younger than I was, but he was about fifty times as intelligent. He was terrifically intelligent. 5. They both laughed like hyenas at stuff that wasn't even funny. 6. He didn't have too bad a sense of humor. 7. At Репсу, you either froze to death or died of the heat. 8. He's not too bad. 9. There were about three inches of snow on the ground, and it was still coming down like a madman. 10. In New York, boy, money really talks - I'm not kidding. 11. The one ugly one, Laverne, wasn't too bad a dancer, but the other one, old Marty, was murder. Old Marty was like dragging the Statue of Liberty around the floor. 12. Four times she asked me that - she was certainly witty. 13. It was that kind of a crazy afternoon, terrifically cold... (J. D. Salinger). 14. He caught a ride home to the crowded loneliness of the barracks. (J. Jones). 15. He smiled back, breathing a memory of gin at me. (W. S. Gilbert). 16. He is a proud, haughty, consequential, turned-nosed peacock. (Ch. Dickens). 17. Now let me introduce you - that's Mr What's-his-name, you remember him, don't you? And over there in the corner, that's the Major, and there's Mr What-d'you-call-him, and that's an American. (E. Waugh). 18. After a while and a cake he crept nervously to the door of the parlour. (A. Tolkien). 19. "Some­one at the door," he said, blinking. - "Some four, I should say by the sound," said Fili. (A. Tolkien). 20. Like a well, like a vault, like a tomb, the prison had no knowledge of the brightness outside. (Ch. Dickens). 21. We danced on the handkerchief-big space between the speak-easy tables. (R. P. Warren). 22. Liza Hamilton was a very different kettle of Irish. Her head was small and round and it held small and round convictions. (J. Steinbeck). 23. There are three doctors in an illness like yours. I don't mean only myself, my partner and the radiologist who does your X-rays, the three I'm referring to are Dr Rest, Dr Diet and Dr Fresh Air. (D Cusack). 24. Little Jon was born with a silver spoon in his mouth which was rather curly and large. (J. Galsworthy). 25. Huck Finn and Holden Caulfield are Good Bad Boys of American liter­ature. (H. G. Vallins). 26. He smelled the ever-beautiful smell of coffee imprisoned in the can. (J. Steinbeck). 27. Her painful shoes slipped off. (J. Updike). 28. We sat down at the table. The jaws got to work around the table. (R. P. Warren). 29. He had all the confidence in the world, and not without reason. (J. O'Hara). 30. I took my obedient feet away from him. (W. S. Gilbert). 31. Most women up London nowadays seem to furnish their rooms with nothing but orchids, foreigners and French novels. (O. Wilde). 32. I felt I wouldn't say "no" to a cup of tea. (K. Mansfield). 33. Better beans and bacon in peace than cakes and ale in fear. (Aesop). 34. A most intense young man, A soulful-eyed young man, An ultra-poetical, super-aes-thetical, Out-of-the-way young man! (Gilbert). 35. When every one is some­body, Then no one's anybody. (Gilbert). 36. The black flower of civilized society, a prison. (N. Hawthorne). 37.1 like work; it fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for hours. I love to keep it by me: the idea of getting rid of it nearly breaks my heart. (J. K. Jerome). 38. A fly sat on the chariot wheel and said, "What a dust I raise." (J. La Fontaine). 39. Please return this book; I find that though many of my friends are poor arithmeticians, they are nearly all good bookkeepers. (W. Scott). 40. Cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education. (Mark Twain).