The Gettysburg Address was given on the occasion of the dedication of a portion of the battleground as a resting place -- cemetery -- for the men who died there. In his speech he said that they could not dedicate, consecrate or hallow the land anymore than the men who had died there had already done. Hallow means to make something holy. So, he was saying that the deaths of men who fought that battle had already made the ground holy.
it means holy ground
Consecrate, hallow this is for those of you who have APEX
But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate we can not consecrate we can not hallow this ground.
Abraham Lincoln referred to the Declaration of Independence in his famous Gettysburg Address. By invoking the document, he was able to make his argument about equality, and the reason for the war as a new birth of freedom.
1-But in a larger sense we can not dedicate,we can not consecrate,we can not hallow this ground. 2-The brave men ,living and dead,who struggled here,have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
People admire the Gettysburg Address because in two minutes President Lincoln was able to sooth a nation that was dying from the inside and turn the tide of a war. With only 272 words, he changed the view of the past into something people could embrace as a new beginning. The Gettysburg Address challenged the way people looked at life. The Gettysburg Address changed the view of the war from petty fights over sectionalism and state into a struggle for freedom and a struggle for democracy. It was a great thing that Abraham Lincoln did.
Consecrate, hallow this is for those of you who have APEX
But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate we can not consecrate we can not hallow this ground.
Anaphora is used in Lincoln's Gettysburg Address-"we can not dedicate---we can not consecrate---w can not hallow" Also, antithesis is used when Lincoln says that "the world will little not...what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here..."
No. The word hallow is a verb, to hallow, generally meaning to consecrate ("to make holy").
Abraham Lincoln referred to the Declaration of Independence in his famous Gettysburg Address. By invoking the document, he was able to make his argument about equality, and the reason for the war as a new birth of freedom.
What Mr. Lincoln was saying there was that we cannot add to the importance of this ground any more than the blood of the soldiers who fought there have already done. consecrate - to make (something) an object of honor or veneration hallow - to respect or honor greatly; revere
This sounds like a line from the Gettysburg Address if so he is dedicating the Gettysburg cemetery of all the fallen union dead. The entire line is important because he said, " we come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for those who gave their lives that a nation might live..BUT in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground."
1-But in a larger sense we can not dedicate,we can not consecrate,we can not hallow this ground. 2-The brave men ,living and dead,who struggled here,have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
Hallow- to make holy; sanctify; consecrate. Sentence: Lord, hallow be thy name.
There is no Hallow in Harry Potter with that name.
(if british) hallow, how are you chap!
Hallow's Victim was created in 1985-08.