Masuri "" Unexplored Charms By: Flin Martyn | - Masuri is a little hamlet tucked away among the undulating mountains of the Shiwalik ranges of the Great Himalayas. A part of the State of Uttarakhand, Masuri is home to a very small population of around 48000 people. Masuri lies close to the most popular tourist destination of the region, Mussoorie. Masuri is situated to the north of Mussoorie at a distance of about 20 kilometers. The time taken to travel between both the places is roughly 35 minutes.
Accommodation In Mantralayam "" Well Geared To Serve Visitors By: soni sajjan | - Thousands of pilgrims visit Mantralayam every year seeking religious solace. The tiny and peaceful hamlet, located on the banks of the Tungabhadra River is one of the most important places of Vaishnava worship in the country. Mantralayam is located in Kurnool district of Andhra Pradesh. Given its religious significance, the little town is well connected to the major cities of Andhra Pradesh by rail and road. The closest airport is at Hyderabad.
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Goof King background It'S naughty selection inside take the tv screen insurance coverage aerial Shi Jin have a tremor during wide mouth, showing pearly white teeth manifestations; very shaking plenitude sizing significant, lcd tv devices, ... Tags:China Acrylic Memo
Heritage Of Ludhiana City By: Suhaina Mazhar | -
Ludhiana is the largest city in the Indian state of Punjab and stands on the old bank of River Sutlej. The story of Ludhiana begins from fifteenth century. It was a little hamlet called Meer Hota in 1481 and this then obtained the title of Lodiana which means the location of Lodi. Ludhiana is the mutation of the title Lodiana. It was subsequently named so because the metropolis was developed during the era of Lodi dynasty that ruled over The Indian subcontinent from Delhi.
Ranthambore "" Jewel Of Rajasthan By: Flin Martyn | - Ranthambore is a tiny little hamlet located in the Sawai Madhopur district of Rajasthan widely renowned for its National Park and Tiger Reserve. The region surrounded by the Aravali hills on one side and the VindhyaChal mountain range on the other is a naturally blessed region perfectly complimented by the quaint and peaceful environment of the region, translating into a perfect soothing escape and with a presence of a widely acclaimed National Park and Tiger Reserve, Ranthambore is also a natur ... Tags:Ranthambore, Ranthambore hotels, hotels in Ranthambore
Are You Looking For Estate Agents In Bayswater? By: Carey Ronson | - Bayswater is located in London W2 in the City of Westminster and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Initially a small hamlet in the 17th century, Bayswater was named after the rivulet passing through and was well known for its tea gardens and water supply. Today, Bayswater is a flourishing and cosmopolitan neighbourhood right in the heart of London, and is situated just north of Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park and 3 miles west-north-west of Charing Cross.
Lava "" Lesser Known Paradise By: Flin Martyn | - Hidden among the dense evergreen forests of the Himalayan region, lies this tiny little hamlet known as Lava sitting approx 34km east of Kalimpong via Algarah in Darjeeling district. Lava is untouched by urbanization and overt commercialization offering tourists a pleasant quaint little town to relax and relish the serenity, peace and old world charm of the region. Perched up high at an altitude of 2,138m above sea level, Lava enjoys a panoramic view of the various passes and neighboring ... Tags:Lava hotels, hotels in Lava, lava
A leader came into this world in the title of Kisan Baburao Hazare on 15 June, 1937 from a small hamlet near, Bombay state at this moment acknowledged as Maharashtra state in India. He was born to Baburao Hazare who had been an unskilled laborer in the Ayurveda ashram local pharmacy. He had 6 little ones and so easy running of the family was a challenging work for his father. Hazare got a childless aunt who cared for him. She brought him to Bombay and after completing his primary s ... Tags:Anna Hazare, Anna Hazare photos, Anna Hazare videos
Mount Abu Hotels: Elegant Heritage Hotels By: Nirmal Mishra | - Mount Abu hotels are names for elegant cocoon of comfort in the heart of the sole beauteous hill station in Rajasthan. Mostly barren and a desert state, Rajasthan gets a cool retreat at this pretty hamlet. The town basking in beauty and serenity draws attention of hundreds of visitors on Rajasthan tours and they are amazed and enchanted both at the same time. Further enhancing the rejuvenating effect of the town, hotels in Mount Abu are very comfortable establishments available in variety of c ... Tags:Mount Abu Hotels, Accommodation in Mount Abu
Quotes From Macbeth And A Look At Hamlet In Exploring Gender Roles By: Paul Thomson | - What does it mean to be a man or a woman in todays society? None of us can fit into a neat, tiny, little, stereotypical box based on anything, including our gender. How do we define gender and how are these roles presented in literature? Often, many of our favorite characters defy gender stereotypes and thus, are more three-dimensional, more human, and more relatable. The play of gender and society is not limited to the pages of books, but is also reflected in the literary choices of the auth ... Tags:The Outsiders, Huckleberry Finn
Gender-bending In Twelfth Night And To Kill A Mockingbird By: Paul Thomson | - Much stress there is a difference between gender and sex. And there certainly is. Sex is essentially biology, the male and female manifestations or to put it more plainly, the physical parts that come with being male or female. Gender, on the other hand, are the social norms, roles and ideals tied to ones identity, usually ascribed on which of those physical parts you own. Its a social construct, something that is not founded in the actual physical make-up.
The Cautionary Tale Of Shakespeare"s Macbeth By: Paul Thomson | - William Shakespeares Macbeth contains a lotof life lessons. Number one: Dont listen to stranger bearded women when wandering through a fog. Number two: Never let anyone bully you into doing something you dont want to, even if its your wife. And Number 3? If you want to become king, the kill-everything-in-your-path strategy, while seemingly effective, is bound to backfire.
The Scheming Tom Sawyer And Hamlet By: Paul Thomson | - Every myth has its trickster character. In the Greek tradition, youve got Hermes. In Roman mythology, there is Mercurius. In many native American folklore, you have the coyote. And in the American literary tradition? Well, weve got Tom Sawyer.
Technically, Mark Twains famous mischievous but lovable character is not a myth, but nonetheless, we nominate him as one of our cultures prank-pullers. Tom Sawyer is all about the schemes. He tricks the neighbor kids into painting the h ... Tags:Tom sawyer, hamlet, hamlet summary, william shakespeare, lit
Hamlet And Romeo Have Tea With Holden Caulfield: Inside Fan-fiction By: Paul Thomson | - Fan fiction has grown in popularity over the last decade. Gone are the days when the audience believed that a character's fate was strictly in the hands of its creator; now they seem to believe that they can decide the future (or at the very least, an alternate reality) of their favorite characters from film, literature and even history.
Writer/comedian/banjo player/playwright Steve Martin probably would not like to have his play Picasso at the Lapin Agile referred to as fan fiction, but ... Tags:hamlet, romeo and juliet, catcher in the rye, william shakes
Losing Their Heads: Inner Beasts In Lord Of The Flies And Macbeth Summary By: Paul Thomson | - William Goldings classic Lord of the Flies is probably not the best book to read if you want to feel good about humanity or feel comfortable about babysitting a family of little boys all by yourself on a Friday night. It is also not a good beach read for pig lovers. Instead, it is a blunt allegorical look at what can happen when civilizations law and order vanishes, and humanity is left to its own beastly instincts.
Teen Queens Of Tragedy: Romeo And Juliet"s Leading Lady, Hamlet"s Ophelia And The Men By: Paul Thomson | - Its not easy being a girl, especially a young girl in love. First, you have to worry about what your parents will think about your new boy. Secondly, you have to figure out how far intimately you want to go with said boy. Then, of course, theres the whole boyfriend-killed-a-relative-and-has-been-exiled thing. Well, thats how William Shakespeare writes about young tragic love: forever fraught between the boy and family loyalties. Whats a young girl to do?
Forget Romeo And Juliet: Hamlet"s Teen-like Angst A Better Way To Reach Teenager Readers By: Paul Thomson | - For high school students, the works of William Shakespeare are not the easiest literature to grasp, much less to get them to care about. The first hurdle, of course, is the language. With all the LOLs, ridics, and OMGs used in a teens daily vernacular, Shakespearean verse such as to be, or not to be: that is the question can sound a lot like Charlie Browns teachers to the ears of adolescents. Wha wha whoamp whoamp.
Hogwarts, Hamlet And Huckleberry Finn: Inspirations For Education By: Paul Thomson | - It cannot be doubted that public education in this country is at a crossroads. Whether it's at the primary, secondary or post-secondary level, students, teachers and institutions are under fire. Schools doesn't have enough money, teachers are either grossly over or underpaid depending on who you ask, and students appear to be woefully unprepared for their next level of education or the job market. And that's not even taking into account how they perform in comparison to their counterparts in oth ... Tags:hamlet, CAHSEE, huckleberry finn, william shakespeare
Hamlet And Romeo And Juliet: On The Page And On The Stage By: Paul Thomson | - Professors can take a lot of approaches when it comes to teaching Shakespeare. Some professors would teach the Bards works like they would any other kind of literature: with lots and lots of theory. Economic theory for The Merchant of Venice, racial theory for Othello, psychoanalytic theory for A Midsummer Nights Dream, just to name a few. They think of Shakespeares plays like any other novel they might teach: sure its in iambic pentameter, which is slightly unusual for a novel, but ... Tags:Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, Huckleberry Finn, William Shakespe
Unlikable Titular Characters In Shakespeare: Hamlet, Macbeth And Othello By: Paul Thomson | - William Shakespeare seemed to have had a propensity for unlikable titular characters. Many of his plays, particularly the tragedies, were named for selfish, indecisive, vengeful, or otherwise just unpleasant men. Its difficult to enjoy a work of literature or theater when the protagonist is unappealing, but plays like Hamlet, Macbeth and Othello have endured for centuries.
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, starts off sympathetically; his father the king has recently died and Hamlet has good r ... Tags:Hamlet Quotes, Macbeth Quotes, Macbeth Summary
What Light Through Yonder Window Breaks: Iambic Pentameter In Hamlet And Romeo And Juliet By: Paul Thomson | - The term iambic pentameter can seem intimidating to someone unfamiliar with poetry. Anyone with a passing Shakespeare familiarity will likely associate the term with the Bards work, but may not have a clue what it really means or what purpose it has served to other writers like Geoffrey Chaucer and Alexander Pope.
Iambic pentameter is a meter of poetry, utilized by a variety of poets, but made most famous by William Shakespeare. An iamb is a foot of poetry that consis ... Tags:Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare, Literature, D
I Am Not Prince Hamlet: The Love Song Of Alfred J. Prufrock And Other Meta-fictional Works By: Paul Thomson | - Being meta seems to be all the rage in contemporary fiction. Popular books like The Jane Austen Book Club, The Eyre Affair and The Dante Club all build upon classic works of fiction (the Jane Austen canon, Jane Eyre and the Divine Comedy, respectively). Theyre not traditional modern adaptations (think the movie Clueless to the novel Emma), nor are they speculative prequels or sequels (such as Wide Sargasso Sea, a speculative prequel to Charlotte Brontes Jane Eyre); theyre something comp ... Tags:Catcher in the Rye, Hamlet quotes, Love Song of Alfred J. Pr
The Presentation Of Denmark In The Opening Acting Of Hamlet By: Amit59595 | - The presentation of Hamlet's Denmark is opening seen in the opening happening of Hamlet everywhere the two guards enter and the opening mechanism with the intention of is thought is "who is here?" This without delay sets the mood of the totality amuse yourself and to a a number of amount could you repeat that? Kind of state Denmark is in which is in a state of piercing alert, moreover the darkness and the mystery of who is here sets an ominous tone representing the amuse yourself and moreover se ... Tags:Music, Movies, Movie Review
Simba Is The New Hamlet Similarities Between Hamlet And The Lion King By: Paul Thomson | - Modern adaptations of Shakespeare's plays are incredibly common, and, for some reason, they're frequently set in high schools. While it's true that Romeo and Juliet are actually teenagers, most of the Shakespeare's lead characters are meant to be grown adults and his plays take place in very grown-adult settings. Yet, for some reason, Hollywood believes that a high school is the best place to show a modernized version of some of the Bard's greatest works.
Minor Characters, Major Impact: A Look At The Minor Characters In Hamlet, Macbeth And To Kill A Mo By: Paul Thomson | - Minor characters serve an important role in literature. Frequently, its the minor characters in novels that the reader will connect with and especially enjoy, even more than the protagonist. Mansfield Parks deliciously manipulative Mary Crawford is infinitely more intriguing than the painfully good Fanny Price. J.K. Rowling has created a small army of wonderful minor characters in the Harry Potter books, from the inspiring Sirius Black to the downright infuriating Dolores Umbridge.
To Quote Or Not To Quote: Misinterpreting Hamlet, Macbeth And Romeo And Juliet By: Paul Thomson | - Shakespeare is frequently quoted, both by true Shakespeare enthusiasts, and people who just assume that quoting Shakespeare will make them sound smart. A lot of people who haven't read a word of Shakespeare have heard about him enough in popular culture to feel comfortable referencing his most well-known works in casual conversation, even if they don't actually have a real understanding of the text they're citing.
More Than A Summary Of Their Parts: Hamlet, Macbeth, And Catcher In The Rye By: Paul Thomson | - While opinions on literature differ significantly, most scholars agree on which works of literature can be considered great. Not necessarily great reads but great as in the effort the author made to create them, the impact they had on the world around them, and their likelihood of standing the test of time. Regardless of ones personal opinion about James Joyces Ulysses, it cannot be denied that its a significant contribution to literature, and most professors would agree tha ... Tags:Hamlet summary, Macbeth summary, Catcher in the Rye summary
Sat, Act, Ap Exams: What To Do (and When) For College-bound Students By: Paul Thomson | - Waiting until the senior year to start making oneself attractive to colleges is one of the biggest mistakes a high school can make. Colleges like to see sustained achievement across all of the high school years, both academic and extracurricular. When an admissions officer looks at an application and only sees AP courses and outside activities in the junior and senior year, the admissions officer will likely think that the applicant was only doing those things because they look good on a college ... Tags:SAT test prep, AP Exam, AP Exam Prep, Hamlet, Hamlet quotes
Know Thy Enemy: A Guide To Successful Ap English Literature Test Preparation By: Paul Thomson | - All one has to do is go to the test preparation section of any major bookstore to see what serious business it is. Books, DVDs, guides, games. There are classes and private tutors and online tutorials and forums galore. Testing has become such a crucial part of the high school experience; no wonder high school students are so stressed out.
Female Characters In Hamlet, Romeo And Juliet, And Macbeth By: Paul Thomson | - William Shakespeare is generally considered an avant-garde writer with progressive ideas about gender. Because of the era in which he wrote, the women in his plays generally had to be wives, servants, or a woman of some type of ill repute. But an examination of the female characters of three of his major tragedies shows that though these women may have been secondary to the men in their lives, they were still complex, round characters and deserving of as much attention and analysis as their male ... Tags:hamlet, romeo and juliet, macbeth, william shakespeare
Men To Watch Out For Hamlet And Holden Caulfield Of Catcher In The Rye By: Paul Thomson | - It's unlikely that William Shakespeare or J.D. Salinger intended for any of their literary works to serve as cautionary tales for young women entering the dating world, their two most famous works, Hamlet and The Catcher in the Rye, respectively, have done just that. Hamlet, Prince of Denmark and Holden Caulfield of The Catcher in the Rye are two of the worst boyfriends in all of literature. One is plagued by intense paranoia and indecision and the other is an emotionally stunted man-child who d ... Tags:hamlet, catcher in the rye, william shakespeare, jd salinger
When Too Much Character Is A Bad Thing: Hamlet, Gatsby, And Prufrock By: Paul Thomson | - As Stieg Larssons Millennium trilogy has recently reminded us, one of the most attractive features of a work of literature is a strong central character. Compelling or not, however, some protagonists are just too strong for their own good. Here are three classic examples of characters whose unwillingness to compromise leads to their personal downfall.
Example One: The Romantic Politician. Hes sensitive, hes idealistic, and hes just found out what everyone means by that whole p ... Tags:Great Gatsby, Prufrock, Hamlet
Uncover A Historic British Hamlet In Steel City Sheffield By: Pushpitha Wijesinghe | - Quietly nestled in the scenic surrounding of South Yorkshire lies the quaint English city of Sheffield which has caused quite a stir since it came in to being in the 8h century. Renowned as steel manufacturing powerhouse in Britain, the home of music progenies the likes of Def Leopard and the Arctic Monkeys also founded the worlds first football club, the Sheffield FC. Lined with stunning landscapes, towering cathedrals, and winter gardens, visitors will be spoiled for choice when exploring t ... Tags:sheffield hotel, hotel sheffield, copthorne hotel sheffield,
Huckleberry Finn"s Shout-outs To Hamlet And Romeo And Juliet By: Paul Thomson | - While its nearly impossible to find a literary work that doesnt reference another literary work, it isnt always easy to tell why such references are included. Sometimes they foreshadow important plot points, sometimes they help characterize a person in the narrative, and sometimes, were convinced, theyre just included to make the author sound smart. The really good ones, however, work on multiple levels the most important of which being to further the storys overarching mes ... Tags:Huckleberry Finn, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, literature, educ
Huckleberry Finn As A Model For To Kill A Mockingbird By: Paul Thomson | - Ernest Hemingway famously wrote that Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is the best book we've had. All American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing as good since. We object to that last part, but its undeniable that Hucks influence has carried over into countless later works.
Take, for example, Harper Lees 1960 masterpiece To Kill a Mockingbird. Although the storys setting is a few states and about a century off, the novel can be seen ... Tags:To Kill a Mockingbird, Hamlet, Shakespeare, Literature, Languages
The Individuality Of Protagonists In Lee"s To Kill A Mockingbird And Shakespeare"s Hamlet By: Paul Thomson | - For Western literature, the concept of individuality is a remarkably recent innovation. It goes without saying that the classics feature a lot of remarkable individual characters, but they are only remarkable in their ability to meet and exceed the highest expectations of their roles in society. (Just think Beowulf playing the ultimate male part as the warrior, provider, and peace-keeper.) This is why so many old stories end in weddings, which are basically an initiation rite for turning individ ... Tags:To Kill a Mockingbird, Hamlet, Shakespeare
A Substance In Breast Milk Can Kill Forty Kinds Of Cancer Cells By: TonyEva | - Through laboratory experiments, researchers from Gothenburg University and Lund University in Sweden found that a mixture combined with breast milk alpha lactalbumin and fatty acids can kill 40 kinds of cancer cells. Based on the English acronym HAMLET of this substance, the researchers called this substance "Hamlet." Daily Mail quoted words of Geer Carlsson, an assistant professor in the University of Gothenburg of Department of Chemistry, which reported that in fact, this material was found in ... Tags:Research, Breast milk, Health, Hamlet
Hamlet, The Catcher In The Rye, And The Age-old Story Of Teen Angst By: Paul Thomson | - Despite what marketers would have you believe, angst is not just a gelled, chiseled, perfectly unkempt product of the Twilight phenomenon. Holden Caulfield is king of twentieth-century angst, and he was kicking around with a buzz cut back in the 1950s. Sren Kierkegaard set the philosophical bar for angst in the nineteenth century and managed to do so while wearing a top hat. And who can forget Prince Hamlet, the skull-carrying, pantaloon-wearing original angst-er of the European canon? < ... Tags:The Catcher in the Rye, To Kill a Mockingbird, J.D Salinger,
Getting To The Bottom Of Hamlet"s Lovelife With Quotes From Shakespeare"s Play By: Paul Thomson | - One of the most attention-grabbing debates still being waged over Shakespeares "Hamlet" is the issue of whether or not Hamlet and Ophelia have slept together. The most famous quote on the matter Hamlets angry, repeated "Get thee to a nunnery" would seem to accuse Ophelia of having rejected his advances if it werent for the fact that "nunnery" is also Elizabethan slang for "brothel." The did they / didnt they debate is unusual in that it implies a lot more backstory than mo ... Tags:hamlet, hamlet quotes, william shakespeare, play, drama,
Brushing Up On Characters And Symbolism In Shakespeare"s Hamlet By: Paul Thomson | - Hamlet, Hamlet symbolism, Hamlet characters, book, analysis, william shakespeare, play,
Shakespeares Hamlet has so thoroughly been woven into Western culture that you probably cant go a week without hearing an allusion to it, whether or not you realize it. To be or not to be, on its own, has been the butt of enough jokes to last a couple of centuries. This is one of Shakespeares tragedies, so its unsurprising that a lot of what people remember has something to do with m ... Tags:Hamlet, Hamlet symbolism, Hamlet characters, book, analysis,
What Is Your Understanding Of The Famous Words "to Be Or Not To Be" By: wallace | - Outside the Bible, six words of to be or not to be are the most famous in all the literature of the world. They were spoken by Hamlet when he was thinking aloud, and they are the most famous words in Shakespeare because Hamlet was speaking not only for himself but also for every thinking man and woman. To be or not to be, to live or not to live, to live richly and abundantly and eagerly, or to live dully and meanly and scarcely. A philosopher once wanted to know whether he was alive or not, whic ... Tags:Understanding, Motto, Shakespeare, Hamlet, To be or not to be,
The Comedy Of Hamlet Quotes By: Paul Thomson | - In the competition for Angstiest Dane, Prince Hamlet ranks way up there alongside Kierkegaard in the "off the charts" division, giving "The Tragedy of Hamlet" a reputation for being exhausting and unapproachable. Hamlet spends four of the play's five acts in an ever-deepening existential funk. And rightly so, considering the fact that a) his dad died two months ago, b) his girlfriend won't talk to him, c) his mom has already remarried, d) his new "dad" was once his uncle, meaning mom is bumping ... Tags:hamlet, hamlet quotes, literature, william shakespeare
Hamlet Tickets Enjoying The Show Of Hamlet By: Peri Witny | - Jude Law is returning to the stage for first time after he left in 1995. He is returning on stage in US after having the full sold out events from London's West End and in the Elsinore Caste of Denmark. The Jude Law is amazing for the people who like to watch the role of Hamlet, who is in grief after the death of his father and he is looking to take revenge for his family and more importantly, for the savage of kingdom. Jude Law is amazing everyone once again, playing the role of Prince Hamlet; ... Tags:Hamlet Tickets, Buy Hamlet Tickets, cheap Hamlet Tickets, discounted Hamlet Tickets
Crazy And Inspiring Quotes From Hamlet And To Kill A Mockingbird By: Paul Thomson | - "The Tragedy of Hamlet" is one of those plays that hovers around a thousand on the quotability meter. "To be, or not to be" and the ensuing inner debate on suicide is one of the earliest and most important moments of existentialism in Western literature. Hamlet's soliloquy is so good, in fact, that sometimes one forgets how brilliant the rest of the play is.
In fact, Prince Hamlet is arguably at his best when he's in the room with other people. Never has the description "crazy smart" been ... Tags:Hamlet, to kill a mockingbird quotes, hamlet quotes
Doing The Wrong Thing The Right Way: A Look At The Characters In Macbeth And Hamlet By: Paul Thomson | - "The Tragedy of Macbeth" and "The Tragedy of Hamlet" are Shakespeares most widely read plays featuring royalty as main characters. Both are about the violent overthrow of the throne, both contain plenty of needless casualties, and both are gruesome enough to drive their leading ladies to suicide. (Kudos to Shakespeare for writing these cleverly enough that they werent banned by the English Crown, which was a tad sensitive in those days.) Superficial details aside, however, these two tales ... Tags:Macbeth, Hamlet, characters, character, analysis, main,
Madness, Futility, And Death: A Shakespearean Take On Poe's The Raven"' By: Paul Thomson | - Edgar Allan Poes The Raven is one of the most easily recognizable poems in the world, ranking it right up there with Beans, Beans, the Musical Fruit. Written from a first-person perspective, the poem chronicles its narrators rapid descent into madness, paranoia, and the macabre after a strange encounter with a ghoulish raven. His brooding melancholy at the beginning of the narrative has been set off by the loss of a beloved Lenore, whom we are left to presume ... Tags:The Raven, Edgar Allan Poe, Shakespeare, Hamlet, study guide
Why Shakespeare Breaks Basic Writing Rules In Sonnet 18,"' Hamlet,"' And Romeo And Juliet By: Paul Thomson | - Shakespeare famously opens his Sonnet 18 with the question, Shall I compare thee to a summers day? and then proceeds to do exactly that. Aside from establishing rhythmic continuity and rhyme scheme, this may not seem like the best use of the readers time especially considering that sonnets have such limited real estate to begin with. As we read on, however, we discover that the poem, which pretends to be dedicated to a mysterious thee, actually ends up being ... Tags:Sonnet 18, William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet,
Blasts From The Past By: Nate Gillespie | - Sometimes it seems that all is new in the world. New developments in science and technology roll out at a staggering pace, revolutionizing our day-to-day lives and enticing us with the promise of allowing us to boldly go where no man has gone before. (Or, at the very least, enticing us with ridiculously cool CGI effects in the new Star Trek movie.) Sometimes it seems like we'll soon all be communicating with each other only via Twitter.
I Literally Cannot Imagine How Random That Is By: Maxine Clarke | - The English language is one of the most expressive and evocative in the world, yet is also the most bastardised and abused by its native speakers. How often do you find yourself being subjected to throwaway, non-sensical terms which add nothing to the substance of a conversation? The sad thing is, more than you probably realise.