Similar words: austenite, cousteau, austere, austerely, austerity, exhausted, exhauster, austerlitz. Meaning: n. English novelist noted for her insightful portrayals of middle-class families (1775-1817).
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1) What a precocious child — reading Jane Austen at the age of ten!
2) Gwyneth Paltrow goes the Jane Austen route in this tale of a meddler in the romantic lives of others.
3) In this case, however, Jane Austen does not assume that past values are irrecoverable.
4) Within the society that Jane Austen features there are many strict rules.
5) Although in many ways conservative, Jane Austen tolerates and even welcomes change.
6) Jane Austen need not have feared.
7) But for Jane Austen, that was just the beginning.
8) I was reading Jane Austen and dreaming about college.
9) Our first impression, according to Jane Austen, are usually wrong.
10) British country house movies are a mix of Jane Austen, Agatha Christie and Evelyn Waugh, with Wodehouse as the mixologist.
11) Well, I'm in the library parsing a Jane Austen novel looking for dramatic irony, while many of my old friends are dead or in jail.
12) Sense and Sensibility was the first novel Jane Austen published.
13) Seth Grahame-Smith's bestselling mash-up of Jane Austen and George A Romero became one of the most pre-ordered titles this side of The Lost Symbol[Sentencedict.com], based solely on a zeitgeist-surfing title.
14) Jane Austen to Elizabeth and Darcy's marriage as an example gives a negative answer.
15) Beau Brummell wrote nearly all of Jane Austen, and two men and a cat wrote most of Charles Dickens, with the exception of "A Tale of Two Cities, " which Napoleon wrote while visiting St.
16) Jane Austen hurriedly replied, with as much trepidation as amusement.
17) Beau Brummell wrote nearly all of Jane Austen, and two men and a cat wrote most of Charles Dickens, with the exception of "A Tale of Two Cities, " which Napoleon wrote while visiting St. Helena.
18) Does this mean that the message hasn't got across, that Jane Austen has somehow failed to communicate?
19) Today, antagonism towards Birmingham remains as strong as when Jane Austen wrote the words in Emma in 1816.
20) Morals play an important part in both novels and the reader notices that Jane Austen is actually a moralist.
21) Go to bed wishing I could have bestowed an extra twenty years' active life upon Bunuel and Jane Austen.
22) This new film is said to be adapted from a novel by Jane Austen.
23) Full of misunderstanding, tricking, and teasing in the novel, Emma by the famous British writer Jane Austen in early 19th century is often conceived of as a comedy of self-deceit and self-discovery.
24) Consider some of the great thinkers: H.L. Mencken, Tom Paine, Mark Twain, Abraham Lincoln, Bertrand Russell, and Jane Austen.
25) Why is Sir Walter Scott so hard to read now,(http://sentencedict.com/jane austen.html) and Jane Austen not?
26) In none of the issues of conduct arising in the novel is Jane Austen morally neutral.
27) When ? Where ? and How did you run into Jane Austen?
28) Northanger Abbey is the first mature novel written by Jane Austen.
29) The two major novelists of the Romantic period are Jane Austen and Walter Scott.
30) A western literature critic once said that " even David Ricardo (a British economist) had a unlikely clearer understanding about the function of money in daily life as Jane Austen had."
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