Skip to main content

History of English Literature Quiz & Mock Test

 

    Comments

    Search

    Popular posts from this blog

    Not Just Oranges by Isai Tobolsky Short Summary

     Isai Tobolsky is the author of the short story titled "Not Just Oranges." The narrative explores a range of human experiences, including love, innocence, arrogance, and repentance. A mother raises her young daughter all by herself in the narrative's fictional setting. She has a tremendous amount of love for her daughter. Her income is not very significant due to the fact that she is employed as a charwoman in a medical facility. On the other hand, she provides an exceptionally healthy diet for her daughter. At one point, the young girl makes a request to her mother to purchase a blue ball. She has a lot of fun with the ball that her mother buys for her when she plays with it. However, there comes a day when the ball hits the window of their next-door neighbours, the Malachovs. It shatters a pricey vase that was sitting on the window sill.  The elderly woman, Mrs. Malachov, gets worked up into a rage. The young girl and her mother pay a visit to the Malchakovs' home,

    The Glove and the Lion Poem by Leigh Hunt Summary, Notes & Explanation in English

    The poem The Glove and the Lion has four stanzas. Six-line stanzas rhyme aa bb cc. 13 feet (?) per line. The poem's setting is far from Hunt's time. The poem's kings, noblemen, and ladies give it a pre-Renaissance feel. Hunt's poem describes an unusual experience. A royal court watches two beast kings battle. Courtiers watch the king's spectacle from comfortable seats. Many of Hunts' poems have a metaphorical secondary meaning, such as a battle between two powerful people. In the midst of the spectacle, the poet shows us Count de Lorge's love affair with a woman. The poet lists values held by his poem's people: pride, gallantry, valour, and love. The second stanza features vivid images. "Rampled and roared" is alliterative and paradoxical ("horrid laughing jaws"). The short verbs show how quickly the beasts moved: "They bit, glared, and gave beam blows." The repeated /w/ sound in "wind went with their paws" emphasi

    Expansion of Proverbs in English with Examples

     Proverbs are well-known sayings that offer life and behaviour advice, such as "Honesty is the best policy" and "All that glitters is not gold." Simple proverbs have deep meaning. They're short but full of wisdom. Metaphors are common in proverbs. Metaphors compare two dissimilar things without using the words 'like' or 'as' Proverbial sayings often use irony or words with opposite meanings. Proverb expansion is a worthwhile writing assignment. It involves understanding a proverb's meaning, implication, and relevance. To expand a proverb, explain its meaning and significance by using reasoning and real-life examples to convey its truth and wisdom. 1) Unity of thought; 2) Order; 3) Coherence; 4) Variety; 5) Expansion. Haste makes waste (or) Slow and steady wins the race. We should be careful when working. No hurrying! We should work slowly to improve. When climbing a tree or hill, be careful. We'll fall if we're careless or hurried. Th