Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Used in colonial and Federal Era American cases when the defendant is listed first; e.g., "John Doe v. Richard Roe" is labeled "Richard Roe ads. John Doe." The long script "S" of the period often makes this appear as "adj." adj. — see "ad." above. Aff'd – affirmed; AG or A-G – Advocate general (European Union)
Wroth is a surname, and may refer to: Henry Wroth, an English royalist soldier; John Wroth, any of several people of that name; Krysty Wroth a fictional character;
(adj., of a battery) discharged, exhausted, dead (adj.) level and smooth structured at a single level, not hierarchical (n.) a flat tyre/tire * an apartment that occupies the entire floor of a small building (San Francisco and upstate New York); used also in phrases such as railroad flat: flip-flop a type of footwear a type of electronic circuit
The 22nd sonnet, from the only extant Pamphilia manuscript in Wroth's own hand. [7] Anita Hagerman, in her article "'But Worth pretends': Discovering Jonsonian Masque in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus", discusses Wroth's role in Jonson's The Masque of Blackness and the specific influence of the theme of darkness on Sonnet 22. She ...
ADJ or Adj may refer to: Abbreviation for adjustment, adjoining, or adjacent; ADJ, in linguistics, glossing abbreviation for adjective, a part of speech; AdJ, software;
Grammatical abbreviations are generally written in full or small caps to visually distinguish them from the translations of lexical words. For instance, capital or small-cap PAST (frequently abbreviated to PST) glosses a grammatical past-tense morpheme, while lower-case 'past' would be a literal translation of a word with that meaning.
Lady Mary Wroth (née Sidney; 18 October 1587 [1] – 1651/3) was an English noblewoman and a poet of the English Renaissance. A member of a distinguished literary family, Lady Wroth was among the first female English writers to have achieved an enduring reputation.
With the adjective as a modifier in a noun phrase, the adjective and the noun typically receive equal stress (a black bird), but in a compound, the adjective typically takes primary word stress (a blackbird). Only a small set of English adjectives function in this way: [37] The colour words black, blue, brown, green, grey, red, and white