| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1796 - 468 Seiten
...almost deafen the company. But that noise is so agreeable here , they never make a concert without them. The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or forty couple , and so ill danced , that there is very little pleasure in them. They know... | |
| lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1825 - 352 Seiten
...almost deafen the company. But that noise is so agreeable here, they never make a concert without them. The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or forty couple, and so ill danced, that there is very little pleasure in them. They know but... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1837 - 482 Seiten
...almost deafen the company. But that noise is so agreeable here, they never make a concert without them. The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or forty couple, and so ill danced, that there is very little pleasure in them. They know but... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1837 - 512 Seiten
...almost deafen the company. But that noise is so agreeable here, they never make a concert without them. The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or forty couple, and so ill danced, that there is very little pleasure in them. They know but... | |
| Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner - 1874 - 534 Seiten
...the plural as in the singular), sail (of ships), cannon, shot. The language of common conversation cannot be determined by its boundaries, the literary...concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or fnurty couple (ЬADY MONTAGUE). Five hundred yoke of oxen (Jon. 1, 3.). A constant cascade... | |
| Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner - 1874 - 534 Seiten
...as in the singular), sail (of ships), cannon, shot. The language of common conversation cannot bo, determined by its boundaries, the literary and educated...etymological origin. The English account-books decline such word's regularly, and grammarians in part reject the non-inflection as quite false. Compare Murray's... | |
| Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner - 1874 - 534 Seiten
...the plural as in the singular), sail (of ships), cannon, shot. The language of common conversation cannot be determined by its boundaries, the literary...forms more and more, which moreover are not without an etvmological origin. The English account-books decline such word's regularly, and grammarians in part... | |
| Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner - 1880 - 618 Seiten
...falsch. Vgl. MURRAY'S Grammar, etc. by Gartly. Lond. 1851 p. 111. Statt vieler Beispiele vergleiche man : The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or fourty couple (LADY MONTAGUE). Five hundred yoke of oxen (Jon 1, 3). A constant cascade of... | |
| Lady Mary Wortley Montagu - 1906 - 572 Seiten
...almost deafen the company. But that noise is so agreeable here, they never make a concert without them. The ball always concludes with English country dances, to the number of thirty or forty couple, and so ill danced, that there is very little pleasure in them. They know but... | |
| Raymond Erickson - 1997 - 332 Seiten
...Known generically as the anglaise, by 1717 they were popular in Vienna, as Lady Mary Montagu noted: "The ball always concludes with English Country Dances to the number of 30 or 40 couples and so ill danced that there is little pleasure in them."14 In fact, any number of... | |
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