What is a man / If his chief good and market of his time / Be but to sleep and feed?
I am absolutely rooted if Ferris finds out about this
In every case the geographic name should be euphonious, and not too long, and where it has a meaning the idea conveyed should be pleasant and appropriate. To be most euphonious a name should consist of a regular succession of vowel and consonant or liquid sounds without redundancy or awkward combinations of either; the elemental sounds themselves should be euphonious, and in words of more than two syllables the accent, as a rule, should fall on the last syllable or the penult. […] Botanic and biologic terms from the Latin and Greek are almost always euphonious and may appropriately be used when not too long.
The complex connection between the two figures, the mother and the cry, is established in Duras' narratives through a certain oral pulsivity of the text.
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DiQt
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