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If that sentence not complex enough, how about this: Our old friend Jeffrey is a well educated and versatile indivdual; besides English, he teaches math.
English has many derivative words.
I don't know what a 'mathematical' sentence is. I'd prefer to call it an English sentence that describes a mathematical process and makes a statement concerning mathematical matters.
One factor contributing to your inability to understand written English is the fact that you are too lazy to use a dictionary to properly use the word in a sentence.
Please give the sentence that you found it in, since there is no such word as you have spelled it. Perhaps you meant " ponder ".
pacing
English Literary Renaissance was created in 1971.
English language literary devices:AllegoryAlliterationAllusionAnalogyAssonanceClimaxForeshadowingHyperboleMetaphorOnomatopoeiaOxymoronPersonificationPunSimile
Anglo-Saxon literature, the literary writings in Old English.
Literary English is functionally identical to Spoken English. The only real difference is that there are gramatic and syntactic standards that apply in literary English that do not apply in spoken English. For example in most literary cases one does not use contractions such as don't, whereas these are used all the time in spoken English. Additionally things such as gunna/gonna are not used in the literary context.
The literary device used in this sentence is dialect. Lee uses non-standard English to depict the vernacular speech of the character, adding authenticity and depth to the narrative.
Roger Fowler has written: 'Essays on style and language' -- subject(s): Literary style, Style, Literary 'The language of George Orwell' -- subject(s): Language and languages, Literary style, Style, Knowledge, Language, Language and languages in literature, English language 'Literature As Social Discourse' -- subject(s): Criticism, Discourse analysis, Literary, Language and languages, Literary Discourse analysis, Literary style, Sociolinguistics, Style, Style, Literary 'Linguistics and the novel' -- subject(s): Discourse analysis, Literary, Fiction, Literary Discourse analysis, Technique 'Language in the news' -- subject(s): British newspapers, Discourse analysis, English language, Journalism, Language, Social aspects, Social aspects of English language 'Style and Structure in Literature' 'The languages of literature' -- subject(s): Criticism, Textual, Philology, Textual Criticism
John A. Dern has written: 'Martians, monsters, and Madonna' -- subject(s): Criticism and interpretation, English Experimental fiction, Experimental fiction, English, Fiction, History, History and criticism, Literary form, Postmodernism (Literature), Technique
Business English is very straightforward and has a definite purpose in clarity and effective communication. Literary English can be more poetic in nature, revealing a greater subtext and is sometimes obscure.
V. P. Komarov has written: 'Metafory i allegorii v proizvedeniyakh Shekspira' -- subject(s): Literary style, Style, Metaphor, Allegory, Technique, English language
Neoclassicism preceded Romanticism.
Standard English is the literary dialect. It is not "bad."