Similar words: celiotomy, heliotrope, scoliotic, iliotibial, bibliotheca, bibliotherapy, helios, aphelion. Meaning: n. 1. British poet (born in the United States) who won the Nobel prize for literature; his plays are outstanding examples of modern verse drama (1888-1965) 2. British writer of novels characterized by realistic analysis of provincial Victorian society (1819-1880).
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91. I'm reading a novel The Mill on the Floss, written by the famous novelist, George Eliot.
92. but nevertheless hiding behind frequently male names like Currer Bell, Acton Bell, George Eliot, and so on, and not really entering into questions of the place of women in society.
93. Who cannot recognize a Tennessee Williams play or a novel by John Updike or Ernest Hemingway or a poem by Robert Frost or W. H. Auden or T. S. Eliot?
94. How much do you about the works of George Eliot?
95. Their set of George Eliot was foxed and buckled by the rain.
96. George Fox was later found to be New York governor Eliot Spitzer and Dupre was a prostitute.
97. Eliot took boxing lessons from an ex-pugilist in a toughish gym in Boston's South End.
98. Mr Johnson said writers such as George Eliot and Alexander Pope were " untouchable" in a curriculum shake-up.
99. That is a course that I like to teach, too; usually I teach Plato to T.S. Eliot or Plato to I.A. Richards or some other important figure in the early twentieth century.
100. Jerome Robbins, George Balanchine, Agnes de Mille, Alvin Alley, Eliot Feld, and Martha Graham are among the best known choreographers.
101. So says Dr. Robert S. Eliot, author of a new book titled From Stress to Strength: How to Lighten Your Load and Save Your Life. He's a clinical professor of medicine at the University of Nebraska.
102. Therefore in my opinion, self - abandonment and sympathy are just what George Eliot strongly advocates in Middlemarch.
103. Dickens, Eliot, Gaskell: despite their interest in social change, regionalism, community, the position of women, these great English novelists have nothing in common with Lawrence at all.
104. The keenest of bucolic minds felt a whispering awe the sight the gentry ( George Eliot ).
105. How much do you know about the works of George Eliot?
106. S · Eliot is one of the most influential poet literary critic in the 20 th century.
107. After Eliot and Richards the general tone of criticism changed dramatically from rhapsodic appreciation and dry historicism to the technical critique of specific works of art.
108. Today, however -- a century after her death -- George Eliot is popular again.
109. W. B. Yeats (1865-1939), the winner of Nobel Prize for literature in the year of 1923, was honored by T. S. Eliot as "the greatest poet of our age—certainly the greatest in this language" of English.
110. The Poetical Theory of Jiuye School and T. S. Eliot:From Theoretical Construction to Practical Criticism.
111. She was no longer wrestling with the grief, but could sit down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her thoughts. "George Eliot".
112. Burnside has achieved wide critical acclaim[http://Sentencedict.com], winning the Whitbread Poetry Award in 2000 for The Asylum Dance which was also shortlisted for the Forward and T. S. Eliot prizes.
113. He wrote in a highly individual, sometimes obscure, way that was in sharp contrast to the compressed intellectual style of T. S. Eliot, W. H. Auden and other contemporary poets.
114. I should be most happy, on the understanding that Mr. Eliot will be present, too.
115. T · S · Eliot is one of the most influential poet literary critic in the 20 th century.
116. Washington University in Saint Louis was named Eliot Seminary when it opened in 1853.
117. Rockefeller's grave, and a monument to lawman Eliot Ness, whose ashes were scattered in Wade Pond.
118. T.S. Eliot, who was in many ways associated with the New Criticism, one of its intellectual forebears, nevertheless took a somewhat dim view of it and called it "lemon squeezer criticism."
119. Every new device on the market is, to return to Eliot, "Filled with fancies and empty of meaning / Tumid apathy with no concentration".
120. "How we did adore and envy them, the idols of our college years—Hemingway and Faulkner, Frost and Eliot, Mary McCarthy and Flannery O'Connor and Eudora Welty!" wrote John Updike.
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