In autumn, as the days get shorter and the nights grow shorter, we get ready for Halloween. Octorber 31 is the big day. People in the United States, Canada, the British Isles, and other countries celebrate Halloween.
Everyone wants to escape their boring, stagnant lives full of inertia and regret. But so few people actually have the bravery to run - run away from everything and selflessly seek out personal fulfillment on the other side of the world where they don't understand anything and won't be expected to. The world is full of cowards.
In this book Craig, Kinney and their collaborators confront the main unsolved mysteries in Shakespeare's canon through computer analysis of Shakespeare's and other writers' styles. In some cases their analysis confirms the current scholarly consensus, bringing long-standing questions to something like a final resolution. In other areas the book provides more surprising conclusions: that Shakespeare wrote the 1602 additions to The Spanish Tragedy, for example, and that Marlowe along with Shakespeare was a collaborator on Henry VI, Parts 1 and 2.
Discovering and enjoying phantonyms, gramograms, anagrams and other fascinating word phenomena. Fans of Anguished English and Get Thee to a Punnery will revel in the pages of this rich collection of linguistic acrobatics like palindromes and other fun word combinations, by the authors of The Right Words.
Employs a lively question-and-answer format to illumine the origins of common words, the excesses of sports journalism, the most overused expressions, the advertising arsenal of adjectives, and other persnickety language matters.