10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «NOUNALLY»
Discover the use of
nounally in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
nounally and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
What is installation?: an anthology of writings on ...
Like Wall Definition, it was based on a process of the definition of the definition, in
this case the verb "to isolate". The process produced 108 pages of definition, but
on page 109 there only remained the phrase "nounally adverb". As an adverb ...
Adam Geczy, Benjamin Genocchio, 2006
... like the gypsum eyes of death masks On first glance this appears to be
syntactical nonsense, until it is seen that breath (with its mechanical indications,
spaces and line) forces words to be read conjunctively as well as nounally,
adverbially, ...
3
The Philology of the English Tongue
If I am wrong, my ignorance would only be a natural consequence of my aversion
to the turf as a national evil. All I am here concerned with is the fact that the
sporting world employs the word nounally. But it frequently stands for a verb, as
in the ...
4
English Language Word Builder
... TRILOBAL UNIALGAL ANIMALLY CHORALLY DISTALLY FILIALLY LAICALLY
NOUNALLY RETRALLY TRIBALLY WHEEZILY AQUILINE HARDLINEr
MONOLINE QUERCINE SONATINE THALLINE FATWAING QUALMING
UNBOWING.
5
The Great Bible Dig: Excavation of the Scriptures
The word used as the name of a person or thing. Nounally I of or pertaining to the
nature (the cause or basis) of a noun. Nous—common sense, gumption, shrewd.
Nous I know mind. Unhappiness, pain, sorrow, sickness, illness, disease, etc.
6
Grammatical primer: comprising the outlines of the ...
He said alas ! this word Interj. used nounally. thus Int. used adverbially. I built that
. that house Noun. that [house in idea] Adnoun. NOTES. * Things at option, or
subject to choice. t To resolve an expression, is to reduce it to its elements, and ...
7
Expressionism As an International Literary Phenomenon: ...
... so as to convey a stronger emotional quality: "O Tulpenleuchten gelben
Haares!" (0 tulip radiance of yellow hair) (Ferdinand Hardekopf). As we have
observed, Trakl loved to use colors nounally, thereby suggesting an
undetermined ...
8
The Great Journey: In Pursuit of Jesus' Way, Truth and Life
The word used as the name of a person or thing. Nounally I of or per— taining to
the nature (the cause or basis) of a noun. NousIcommon sense, gumption,
shrewd. Nous I know mind. Unhappiness, pain, sorrow, sickness, illness, disease
, etc.
Although street dust moves nounally from out of doors to indoors, it is probable
that tubercle bacilli accumulate indoors and are carried out of doors. The
statistics gathered by Winslow and Kligler show that, while only about 5 percent
of the ...
... nounally include periods of inaction during which the employee may be on
duty but is not called upon to display either physical activity or sustained
atflention.” ll. Amendment of Section 19. In S. 19 of the principal Act, — (1) for cl. (
d) of sub-s.
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «NOUNALLY»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
nounally is used in the context of the following news items.
The Antichrist in Muhammad: The Triune God of Love
The Trinity is love both verbally and nounally. The personal nature of God and the doctrine that "God is love"--two of the most precious of ... «Catholic Online, Dec 12»