grammatical flaw

  • 11Literary technique — A literary technique (also, literary device, procedure or method) is any element or the entirety of elements a writer intentionally uses in the structure of their work.[1] It can be for example an identifiable rule of thumb, a convention, a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 12Mary Leapor — Title page, Poems Upon Several Occasions (1748) by Mary Leapor Born 1722 Marston St Lawrence, Northamptonshire, England, UK Died 1746 Brackley …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Hadith of the prediction in Sura al-Rum — A Hadith, a recorded oral tradition, is attached to a prediction in the Qur anic Sura ar Rum. More traditions can be found in the books dealing with the Life of the Prophet, as well as the Quranic Tafaseer (exegeses). Introduction The early… …

    Wikipedia

  • 14Substratum in Vedic Sanskrit — Vedic Sanskrit has a number of linguistic features which are alien to most other Indo European languages. Prominent examples include: phonologically, the introduction of retroflexes, which alternate with dentals; morphologically, the formation of …

    Wikipedia

  • 15mathematics, foundations of — Scientific inquiry into the nature of mathematical theories and the scope of mathematical methods. It began with Euclid s Elements as an inquiry into the logical and philosophical basis of mathematics in essence, whether the axioms of any system… …

    Universalium

  • 16Characterization — For other uses, see Characterization (disambiguation). Characterization or characterisation is the art of creating characters for a narrative,[1] including the process of conveying information about them. It may be employed in dramatic works of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Existence (Philosophy of) 2 — Philosophy of existence 2 Sartre Thomas R.Flynn Born 21 June 1905, in Thiviers (Dordogne), Jean Paul Sartre was raised in the Parisian home of his widowed mother’s parents. After his mother’s remarriage, he spent several years with her and his… …

    History of philosophy

  • 18participles — 1. There are two kinds of participle in English: the present participle ending in ing as in We are going, and the past participle ending in d or ed for many verbs and in t or en or some other form for others, as in Have you decided? / New houses… …

    Modern English usage

  • 19de|fec´tive|ness — de|fec|tive «dih FEHK tihv», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. having a flaw or blemish; not complete; not perfect; faulty: »A watch with defective parts will not keep time. ... leaning his head sideways as though he was trying to hear something through… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 20de|fec´tive|ly — de|fec|tive «dih FEHK tihv», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. having a flaw or blemish; not complete; not perfect; faulty: »A watch with defective parts will not keep time. ... leaning his head sideways as though he was trying to hear something through… …

    Useful english dictionary