to face the front of a coat, or the bottom of a dress
The poem was called Lines for Early Middle Age, and it was signed Fenella Crabbe, but it was impossible that Fenella — twenty-eight or twenty-nine — should think of herself as middle-aged, or even, being a woman and a good-looking woman although a poet, have a proleptic Eliotian image of an aged eagle with tired wings demanding to be released from the dressing-mirror.
The next day, as soon as a case was decided, he quietly sneaked out of the room, and, following the successful suitor, significantly held out his palm. To my joy and surprise, says Paunchkourí, he slipped a rupee into it, and whispered to me to give the múnshí (the Persian clerk) his share.[]
To my joy and surprise,
he slipped a rupee into it, and whispered to me to give the múnshí (the Persian clerk) his share.[
What some other languages convey with prospective aspect, English conveys with expressions like going to drive the car home.
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