well,we all know bird is the word
The word Gettsburg is not mentioned.
four
cause people are stupid in alot of things they do
The tone of the Gettysburg Address was (and is), in a word, warmly austere. President Lincoln combined simple and complex sentences, utilized familiar yet inspiring terms, and applied ageless truths to the most pressing problem of his time -- with a calm and dignified, yet also personal and inspirational tone. In a word, he achieved a warm austerity in the tone of this speech.
As judged by its word-choice, imagery, and pacing, among other literary qualities, the tone of the Gettysburg Address is fundamentally restrained and yet hortatory. That is, it lays out in a precise, respectful, and disciplined manner the fundamental issues at work in the Gettysburg battle and in the Civil War as a whole. At the same time, it asks for further devotion, commitment, unfaltering work to be performed for the sake of achieving the lofty goals for which the Civil War was being fought by the Union.
the 29th word in the Gettysburg address is "created"
that
4
The word Gettsburg is not mentioned.
earth
four
well it basically is an announcement he made at Gettysburg Pennsylvania. Lincoln described the way he felt for the nation and so it was and announcement at Gettysburg (xhope this helps!Xoxo,Tiffany >.
cause people are stupid in alot of things they do
Lincoln does remind people in the Gettysburg Address that the founding document of the United States, the Declaration of Independence, states that all men are created equal. He is clearly telling us that slavery is contrary to the most basic American values.
The word repeated the most in the poem, "One Art", by Elizabeth Bishop, is master.
In Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, there are 70 words with two syllables or more. Of those 70 words, these words are repeated more than once:people repeated 3xdedicate repeated 2xdedicated repeated 3xnation repeated 5xconceived repeated 2xrather repeated 2xdevotion repeated 2xTo find the entire list of words with two syllables or more, visit the Related Link. Copy the Address into Word or Notepad. Use Control+H to open the Find-Replace Box. Search for all two letter words... put the word in Find, and leave the Replace Box empty...search only for Whole Words (look under More button on Find-Replace box and tick Whole Words). Next look for 3 letter words and remove. Check for 4 letter words and after sounding out each one, remove all that don't apply. When you do 5 letter words, listen carefully to how they sound... for example, "their" is 1 syllable, but aware is 2 syllables. Use Word Count under Tools to see how many you found. If you have more than 70, look for more words that are 1 syllable.
The tone of the Gettysburg Address was (and is), in a word, warmly austere. President Lincoln combined simple and complex sentences, utilized familiar yet inspiring terms, and applied ageless truths to the most pressing problem of his time -- with a calm and dignified, yet also personal and inspirational tone. In a word, he achieved a warm austerity in the tone of this speech.