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  1. It's likely that the phrase "wear your heart on your sleeve" comes from medieval jousts, where a 'sleeve' referred to a piece of armor which covered and protected the arm. Knights would often wear a lady's token around their sleeve of armor. In the Bard’s tragedy, it is none other than the dishonest and villainous Iago who speaks the words to ...

  2. 2 天前 · The legendary film actor Humphrey Bogart was known for playing a range of tough characters in a series of films throughout the 1940s and 1950s, including The Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, and The African Queen. The men he portrayed often possessed a cool, hardened exterior that occasionally let forth a suggestion of romantic or idealistic ...

  3. Similes and metaphors are familiar ways to convey complex ideas through language. These are just two examples of rhetorical devices and there are plenty more where they came from. A figure of speech by which a part is put for the whole (such as fifty sail for fifty ships), the whole for a part (such as society for high society), the species for the genus (such as cutthroat for assassin), the ...

  4. We're here to help. How to Use Em Dashes (—), En Dashes (–) , and Hyphens (-) Be dashing—and do it well. Absent Letters That Are Heard Anyway. They aren't seen but they are heard. How to Use Accents and Diacritical Marks. You know, the markings above and below letters. A Guide to Using Semicolons.

  5. What Is a Semicolon? The semicolon is the colon's quirkier sibling. While the colon is simply two dots stacked : the semicolon is a dot hovering over a comma ; The semicolon does jobs that are also done by other punctuation marks, but puts its own spin on the task. Like a comma, it can separate elements in a series.

  6. Synonyms for OSTENTATIOUS: loud, noisy, extravagant, gaudy, excessive, ornate, garish, flashy; Antonyms of OSTENTATIOUS: understated, appropriate, conservative, quiet ...

  7. noun. nir· va· na nir-ˈvä-nə. (ˌ)nər- often capitalized. Synonyms of nirvana. 1. : the final beatitude (see beatitude sense 1a) that transcends suffering, karma, and samsara and is sought especially in Buddhism through the extinction of desire and individual consciousness. 2. a. : a place or state of oblivion to care, pain, or external reality.