The speaker of Theodore Roethke's An Elegy for Jane is one of her former professors. He stands at the graveside and professes his love for her. It is not a romantic love, but a love for what she represents, such as vulnerability and curiosity.
The speaker of Theodore Roethke's An Elegy for Jane is one of her former professors. He stands at the graveside and professes his love for her. It is not a romantic love, but a love for what she represents, such as vulnerability and curiosity.
You two will be found out (probably by one of your mortal enemies) and he/she will threaten to give you away if you don't give him/her what they want. They will tell somebody and the teacher will be thrown in the slammer all because he had to resort to a student to get some.
Well, only if they are provided with a safe place to go. In the state of Alabama the age of majority in that state is 19.
It is designed to be thrown
thrown would be the most common English word, I suspect. But others exist, and can be used as synonyms, perhaps a bit more poetic. "Hurled" comes to mind. Also pitched, and heaved, although heaved is for heavy objects, as I understand English (american english speaker from birth).
thrown
thrown.
if you mean thrown from throw its thrown : ριγμένος (rigmenos)
Thrown: Throne
I will throw I'm going to throw I will have thrown I'm going to have thrown
If the ball was thrown-in by a teammate, no. If the ball was thrown-in by an opponent, yes.
The word thrown originated from the word threw. Thrown is the past tense of threw. One could say that the word thrown does not sound very proper, but, it is.