"Love her as in childhood
Through feeble, old and grey.
For you'll never miss a mother's love
Till she's buried beneath the clay."
― Frank McCourt, Angela's Ashes
· observant · optimistic · outgoing · outstanding
Sweet, gentle, witty, acknowledgeable, patient, wise, cultured, esteemed, amiable, lovely, beloved, protective, guiding, venerable, splendid, radiant, serene, sublime, suave, gracious, graceful, saint, sacred, holy, enlightnened, inspiring, inspired, sagacious, tenacious. {= ... unless I got it all wrong & you were asking for "maternal", which in my point of view sums up the above pretty well (albeit "maternal mother" sounds rather redundant...).
descriptive words are also known as vivid words.
The letters spell the words do, he, hi, ho, id, if and in. The letters spell the words is, it, no, of, oh, on, so and to.
There are no words that have double-x in them.
ashes to ashes
The word "ash" or "ashes" is used 10 times in The Great Gatsby. Other words related to ashes or dust in the novel could include "dust," "gray," "pale," or "decay." These words are often used to convey themes of deterioration, mortality, and the passing of time throughout the story.
Desolate, bleak, industrial, decaying.
Mothers are tender, terrific, thoughtful, tremendous, and trustworthy.
Enforced, enslaved
In "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald uses words such as "grey," "dismal," "soot," and "smoky" to evoke the greyness of the valley of ashes. These words create a bleak and desolate atmosphere, reflecting the moral decay and emptiness of the setting.
· observant · optimistic · outgoing · outstanding
Scottish Gaelic is màthraichean. Irish Gaelic is máithreacha.
Abhor, ached, aphid, ashes, ether, ethic and ethyl are words with h in the middle. Additional words include other, rehab, usher and yahoo.
Mothers can be described as magnificent. They also are marvelous.
"Remember, man, that thou art dust, and to dust thou shalt return"
In "A Modest Proposal," Jonathan Swift refers to mothers as breeders, breed mares, and cows. He uses these terms to dehumanize and objectify mothers as part of his satirical critique on British colonialism in Ireland.