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The phrase "an old-stone savage armed" conveys the speaker's view that building a wall is primitive.
An excerpt is a passage or segment taken from a text. The length of an excerpt may be a phrase, a sentence, a paragraph, or an entire chapter.EXAMPLE: "Because we are different, we can have the fun of exchanging worlds, giving our love over and excitements to each other. You can learn music, I can learn flying."- Richard BachHope this helps!! =)
A participial phrase describes an action that is being performed secondary to the main action of the sentence. In the sentence "Drinking my soda, I worked on an essay", "drinking my soda" would be a participial phrase. You can also think of it as a phrase (conveys an idea but does not have both subject and predicate) that contains a participle (usually an -ing or -ed verb).
America! -This idiom is the Americanism for a dish of stir-fried noodles, brought to America by the speakers of the Taishan dialect of Chinese.
The phrase "happy consummation" suggests a sense of fulfillment or achievement, which helps create a tone of satisfaction in the excerpt. It conveys the idea that something desired or anticipated has been successfully completed or realized, implying a positive outcome that brings contentment or joy.
It conveys no idea.
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No, "Till leisurely and last of all" is not an alliteration. Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words, like "she sells seashells." In this phrase, there is no repeating consonant sound at the beginning of the words.
The phrase "tickled pink" means feeling delighted or extremely pleased about something. It conveys a sense of happiness or joy.
An oppositive phrase is a linguistic construct that conveys an opposite or contrasting idea to another phrase or expression in a sentence. It is used to emphasize differences or contradictions between two elements.
"exult in the agony of the torturing flames"
The Answer Is General Reckoning.
loss of still more precious lives
The possessive form is: "The stereo's speakers are too small for this room."
These phrases have no direct translations, and I'm having difficulty thinking of any Japanese phrase that conveys the same meaning.
The phrase "an old-stone savage armed" conveys the speaker's view that building a wall is primitive.