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Имя файла:4585.04.01;ТТА.01;1
Размер:116 Kb
Дата публикации:2015-03-09 04:31:04
Описание:
Англ.яз. Теоретическая грамматика (курс 1) - Тест-тренинг адаптивный

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) "Heaven only knows, my own precious!" Miss Overmore reply, tenderly embracing her.
B) There was indeed no doubt that she were dear to this beautiful friend.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) "That makes her treatment of you all the greater scandal," the governess in possession promptly declared.
B) "Mrs. Farange is too well aware," said Mrs. Wix with sustained spirit, "of what becomes of her letters in this house."
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) As for Mrs. Wix, papa's companion
supply Maisie in later converse with the right word for the attitude of this personage: Mrs. Wix "stood up" to her in a manner that the child herself felt at the time to be astonishing.
B) This occurr indeed after
Miss Overmore had so far raised her interdict as to make a move to the dining-room, where, in the absence of any suggestion of sitting down, it was scarcely more than natural that even poor Mrs. Wix should stand up.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Everything that had happened
when she was really little was dormant, everything but the positive certitude, bequeathed from afar by Moddle, that the natural way for a child to have her parents was separate and successive, like her mutton and her pudding or her bath and her nap.
B) The day were at hand, and she saw it, when she should feel more delight in hurling Maisie at him than in snatching her away; so much so that her conscience winced under the acuteness of a candid friend who had remarked that the real end of all their tugging would be that each
parent would try to make the little girl a burden to the other--a sort of game in which a fond mother clearly wouldn't show to advantage. Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Familiar as she have grown with the
fact of the great alternative to the proper, she felt in her governess and her father a strong reason for not emulating that detachment.
B) At the same time she have heard somehow of little girls--of exalted rank, it was
true--whose education was carried on by instructors of the other sex, and she knew that if she were at school at Brighton it would be thought an advantage to her to be more or less in the hands of masters.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) He had been destined in his youth for diplomacy and momentarily attached, without
a salary, to a legation which enabled him often to say "In MY time in the East": but contemporary history had somehow had no use for him, had hurried past him and left him in perpetual Piccadilly. Every one knew what he had--only twenty-five hundred. Poor Ida, who had run through everything, had now nothing but her carriage and her paralysed uncle.
B) This old brute, as he was called, was supposed to have a lot put away.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) It had seemed to her on their parting that Mrs. Wix had reached the last limits of the squeeze, but she now felt those limits to be transcended and that the duration of her visitor's hug was a direct reply to Miss Overmore's veto.
B) She understood in a flash how the visit had come to be possible--that Mrs. Wix, watching her chance, must have slipped in under protection of the fact that papa, always tormented in spite of arguments with the idea of a school, had, for a three days' excursion to Brighton, absolutely insisted on the attendance of her adversary.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) It was a contradiction that if Ida had now a fancy for waiving the rights she had originally been so hot about her late husband shouldn't jump at the monopoly for which he had also in the first instance so fiercely fought; but when Maisie, with a subtlety beyond her years, sounded this
new ground her main success was in hearing her mother more freshly abused.
B) Miss Overmore had up to now rarely deviated from a decent reserve, but the day came when she expressed herself with a vividness not inferior to Beale's own on the subject of the lady who had fled to the Continent to wriggle out of her job.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) It was Miss Overmore herself who explained to Maisie that she had had a hope of being allowed to accompany her to her father's, and that this hope had been dashed by the way her mother took it.
B) She says that if I ever do such a thing as enter his service I must never expect to show my face in this house again.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) It were true that when Maisie explained their absence and their important motive Mrs. Wix wore an expression so peculiar that it could only have had its origin in surprise.
B) This contradiction indeed peeped out only to vanish, for at the very moment that, in the spirit of it, she throw herself afresh upon her young friend a hansom crested with neat luggage rattled up to the door and Miss Overmore bounded out.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) It would serve this lady right, Maisie gathered, if that contract, in the shape of an overgrown and underdressed daughter, should be shipped straight out to her and landed at her feet in the midst of scandalous excesses.
B) The picture of these pursuits was what Miss Overmore took refuge in when the child tried timidly to ascertain if her father were disposed to feel he had too much of her.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Like her husband she carried clothes, carried them as a train carries passengers: people had been known to compare their taste and dispute about the accommodation they gave these articles, though inclining on the whole to the commendation of Ida as less overcrowded, especially with jewellery and flowers.
B) Beale Farange had natural decorations, a kind of costume in his vast fair beard, burnished like a gold breastplate, and in the eternal glitter of the teeth that his long moustache had been trained not to hide and that gave him, in every possible situation, the look of the joy of life.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Maisie associated this showier presence with
her now being "big," knowing of course that nursery-governesses were only for little girls who were not, as she said, "really" little.
B) She vaguely know, further, somehow, that the future was still bigger than she, and that a part of what made it so was the number of governesses lurking in it and ready to dart out. Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Moddle had become at this time, after alternations of residence of which the child had no clear record, an image faintly embalmed in the remembrance of hungry disappearances from the nursery and distressful lapses in the alphabet, sad embarrassments, in particular, when invited to recognize something her nurse described as "the important letter haitch."

B) Miss Overmore, however hungry, never disappeared: this marked her somehow as
of higher rank, and the character was confirmed by a prettiness that Maisie supposed to be extraordinary.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Mrs. Farange had described her as almost too pretty, and some one had asked what that mattered so long as Beale wasn't there. "
B) Beale or no Beale," Maisie had heard her mother reply, "I take her because she's a lady and yet awfully poor.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Nothing could incommode him more than not to got the good, for the child, of a nice female appendage who had clearly taken a fancy to her.
B) One of the things Ida said to the appendage was that Beale's was a house in which no decent woman could consent to be seen.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Rather nice people, but there is seven sisters at home. What do people mean?"
B) Maisie don't know what people meant, but she knew very soon all the names of all the sisters; she could say them off better than she could say the multiplication-table. Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) She evaded the point and only kick up all
round it the dust of Ida's heartlessness and folly, of which the supreme proof, it appeared, was the fact that she was accompanied on her journey by a gentleman whom, to be painfully plain on it, she had--well, "picked up."
B) The terms on which, unless they was married, ladies and gentlemen might, as Miss Overmore expressed it, knock about together, were the terms on which she and Mr. Farange had exposed themselves to possible misconception.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) She have indeed, as has been noted, often explained this before, often said to Maisie: "I don't know what in the world, darling, your father and I should do without you, for you just make the
difference, as I've told you, of keeping us perfectly proper."
B) The child
take in the office it was so endearingly presented to her that she performed a comfort that helped her to a sense of security even in the event of her mother's giving her up.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) She privately wonder moreover, though she never asked, about the awful poverty, of which her companion also never spoke.
B) Food at any rate come up by mysterious laws; Miss Overmore never, like Moddle, had on an apron, and when she ate she held her fork with her little finger curled out.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) She saw more and more; she saw too much.
B) It was Miss Overmore, her first governess, who on a momentous occasion had sown the seeds of secrecy; sown them not by anything she said, but by a mere roll of those fine eyes which Maisie already admired.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) She turned these things over and remarked to Miss Overmore that if she should go to her mother perhaps the gentleman might become her tutor.
B) It quite fell in with this intensity those one day, on returning from a walk with the housemaid, Maisie should have found her in the hall, seated on the stool usually occupied by the telegraph-boys who haunted Beale Farange's door and kicked their heels while, in his room, answers to their missives took form with the aid of smoke-puffs and growls.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) So I've promised not to attempt to go with you.
B) If I wait patiently till you come back here we shall certainly be together once more.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) The bright creature told her little charge frankly what had happened--that she had really been unable to hold out.
B) She had broke her vow to Mrs. Farange; she had struggled for three days and then had come straight to Maisie's papa and told him the simple truth.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) The child, who watch her at many moments, watched her particularly at that one.
B) "I think you're lovely,"
she often say to her; even mamma, who was lovely too, had not such a pretty way with the fork.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) The prospect of not showing to advantage, a distinction in which she held she had never fail, begot in Ida Farange an ill humour of which several persons felt the effect.
B) She determined that Beale at any rate should feel it; she reflected afresh that in the study of how to be odious to him she must never give way.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) The shock of her encounter with Mrs. Wix was less violent than Maisie had feared on seeing her and didn't at all interfere with the sociable tone in which, under her rival's eyes, she explained to her little charge that she had returned, for a particular reason, a day sooner than she first intended.
B) She have left papa--in such nice lodgings--at Brighton; but he would come back to his dear little home on the morrow.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) Waiting patiently, and above all waiting till she should came back there, seemed to Maisie a long way round--it reminded her of all the things she had been told, first and last, that she should have if she'd be good and that in spite of her goodness she had never had at all.
B) "Then who'll takes care of me at papa's?"
Подберите правильный ответ
Define if the sentence is grammatically correct.
A) What could have proved it better than the fact that before a week was out, in spite of their distressing separation and her mother's prohibition and Miss Overmore's scruples and Miss Overmore's promise, the beautiful friend had turned up at her father's?
B) The little lady already engaged there to came by the hour, a fat dark little lady with a foreign name and dirty fingers, who wore, throughout, a bonnet that had at first given her a deceptive air, too soon dispelled, of not staying long, besides asking her pupil questions that had nothing
to do with lessons, questions that Beale Farange himself, when two or three were repeated to him, admitted to be awfully low--this strange apparition faded before the bright creature who had braved everything for Maisie's sake.
Подберите правильный ответ
Define the syntactic function of the underlined word: Billiards was her great accomplishment
and the distinction her name always first produced the mention of. Notwithstanding some very long lines everything about her that might have been large and that in many women profited by the licence was, with a single exception, admired and cited for its smallness.
Define the syntactic function of the underlined word: She was a person who, when she was out—and she was always out--produced everywhere a sense of having been seen often, the sense indeed of a kind of abuse of visibility, so that it would have been, in the usual places rather vulgar to wonder at her. Strangers only did that; but they, to the amusement of the familiar,
did it very much: it was an inevitable way of betraying an alien habit.
Define the type of the sentence: On this basis it had been arranged that she should stay;
her courage had been rewarded; she left Maisie in no doubt as to the
amount of courage she had required.
Fill in the gap: "Oh you needn't worry: she doesn't care!" Miss Overmore had often
said to her ____________ reference to any fear that her mother might resent her prolonged detention.
Fill in the gap: Her parted lips locked themselves _________ the determination to be employed
no longer.
Fill in the gap: It was literally a moral revolution and accomplished in the depths ________ her
nature.
Fill in the gap: Maisie knew Mrs.
Farange had gone abroad, for she had had weeks and weeks before a letter from her beginning "My precious pet" and taking leave __________ her for an indeterminate time; but she had not seen in it a renunciation of hatred or of the writer's policy of asserting herself, for the sharpest of all her impressions had been that there was nothing her mother would ever care so much about as to torment Mr. Farange.
Fill in the gap: Maisie meanwhile, as a subject of familiar gossip on what was to be done
with her, was left so much _________ herself that she had hours of wistful
thought of the large loose discipline of Mrs. Wix; yet she none the less
held it under her father's roof a point of superiority that none of his
visitors were ladies.
Fill in the gap: She had a new feeling, the feeling of danger; _______ which a new remedy
rose to meet it, the idea of an inner self or, in other words, of concealment.
Fill in the gap: She was now old enough to understand how disproportionate a stay she had
already made with her father; and also old ____________ to enter a little into the ambiguity attending this excess, which oppressed her particularly whenever the question had been touched upon in talk with her governess.
Fill in the gap: The stiff dolls __________ the dusky shelves began to move their arms
and legs; old forms and phrases began to have a sense that frightened her.
Fill in the gap: The theory of her stupidity, eventually embraced ________ her parents,
corresponded with a great date in her small still life: the complete
vision, private but final, of the strange office she filled.
Fill in the gap: When therefore, as she grew older, her parents in turn announced before
her that she had grown shockingly dull, it was not from any real contraction ___________ her little stream of life.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): Embedded in Mrs. Wix's nature as her tooth
had been socketed in her gum, the operation of extracting her would really have been a case for chloroform.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): It was a hug that fortunately left nothing to say, for the poor woman's want of words at such an hour seemed to fall in with her want of everything. Maisie's alternate parent, in the outermost vestibule--he liked the impertinence of
crossing as much as that of his late wife's threshold--stood over them with his open watch and his still more open grin, while from the only corner of an eye on which something of Mrs. Wix's didn't impinge the child saw at the door a brougham in which Miss Overmore also waited.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): She was familiar, at the age of six, with the fact
that everything had been changed on her account, everything ordered to
enable him to give himself up to her.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): The child wondered if they didn't make it hurt
more than usual; but it was only after some time that she was able to attach to the picture of her father's sufferings, and more particularly to her nurse's manner about them, the meaning for which these things had waited.
The sentence is: Her first term was with her father, who spared her only in not letting
her have the wild letters addressed to her by her mother: he confined himself to holding them up at her and shaking them, while he showed his teeth, and then amusing her by the way he chucked them, across the room, bang into the fire.
The sentence is: She was in short introduced to life with a liberality in which the selfishness
of others found its account, and there was nothing to avert the sacrifice but the modesty of her youth.
The sentence is: She was taken
into the confidence of passions on which she fixed just the stare she might have had for images bounding across the wall in the slide of a magic-lantern.
The sentence is: The child was provided for, but the new arrangement was inevitably
confounding to a young intelligence intensely aware that something had happened which must matter a good deal and looking anxiously out for the effects of so great a cause.
The sentence refers to: Attached, however, to the second pronouncement was a condition that
detracted, for Beale Farange, from its sweetness--an order that he should refund to his late wife the twenty-six hundred pounds put down by her, as it was called, some three years before, in the interest of the child's maintenance and precisely on a proved understanding that he would take no proceedings: a sum of which he had had the administration and of which he could render not the least account.
The sentence refers to: He was unable to produce the money or to raise it in any way; so that after a squabble scarcely less public and scarcely more decent than the original shock of battle his only issue from his predicament was a compromise proposed by his legal advisers and
finally accepted by hers.
The sentence refers to: His debt was by this arrangement remitted to him and the little girl
disposed of in a manner worthy of the judgement-seat of Solomon.
The sentence refers to: The litigation seemed interminable and had in fact been complicated; but
by the decision on the appeal the judgement of the divorce-court was confirmed as to the assignment of the child.
The sentence refers to: They would take her, in rotation, for six months at a time; she would
spend half the year with each.
The underlined word is: "Sir Claude?" Maisie wonderingly echoed. But while Mrs. Wix explained that this gentleman was a dear friend of Mrs. Farange's, who had been
of great assistance to her in getting to Florence and in making herself comfortable there for the winter, she was not too violently shaken to perceive her old friend's enjoyment of the effect of this news on Miss Overmore.
The underlined word is: "You must take your mamma's message, Maisie, and you must
feel that her wishing me to come to you with it this way is a great proof of interest and affection. She sends you her particular love andannounces to you that she's engaged to be married to Sir Claude."
The underlined word is: It was a game
like another, and Mrs. Wix's visit was clearly the first move in it. Maisie found in this exchange of asperities a fresh incitement to the unformulated fatalism in which her sense of her own career had long since taken refuge; and it was the beginning for her of a deeper
prevision that, in spite of Miss Overmore's brilliancy and Mrs. Wix's passion, she should live to see a change in the nature of the struggle she appeared to have come into the world to produce.
The underlined word is: It was vain for Mrs.
Wix to represent--as she speciously proceeded to do--that all this time would be made up as soon as Mrs. Farange returned: she, Miss Overmore, knew nothing, thank heaven, about her confederate, but was very sureany person capable of forming that sort of relation with the lady in
Florence would easily agree to object to the presence in his house of the fruit of a union that his dignity must ignore.
The underlined word is: Mrs. Wix enquired with astonishment why it should do anything of the sort, and Miss Overmore gave as an instant reason that it was clearly but another dodge in a system of dodges. She wanted to get out of the bargain: why else had she now left Maisie on her father's hands weeks and weeks beyond the time
about which she had originally made such a fuss?
The underlined word is: Mrs. Wix broke into a queer laugh; it sounded to Maisie an unsuccessful
imitation of a neigh. "That's just what I'm here to make known—how perfectly the poor lady comes up to them herself." She held up her head at the child.
The underlined word is: That young lady opened her eyes very wide; she immediately
remarked that Mrs. Farange's marriage would of course put an end to any further pretension to take her daughter back.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are):
A part of it was the consequence of her father's telling her he felt it too, and telling Moddle, in her presence, that she must make a point of driving that home.
Define the syntactic function of the underlined word: The exception was her eyes, which might have been of mere regulation size, but which overstepped the modesty of nature; her mouth, on the other hand, was barely perceptible, and odds were freely taken as to the measurement of her waist.
Define the type of the sentence: Besides she could easily see it.
Define the type of the sentence: He had been rather remarkably absent from his wife's career, and Maisie was never taken to see his grave.
Define the type of the sentence: He had particularly told her so.
Define the type of the sentence: It had originally been yellow, but time had turned that elegance to ashes, to a turbid sallow unvenerable white.
Define the type of the sentence: Maisie had never betrayed her.
Define the type of the sentence: Mrs. Wix's heart was broken.
Define the type of the sentence: She adored his daughter; she couldn't give her up; she'd make for her any sacrifice.
Define the type of the sentence: She knew governesses were poor.
Define the type of the sentence: The child had lately been to the dentist's and had a term of comparison for the screwed-up intensity of the scene.
Define the type of the sentence: The second parting from Miss Overmore had been bad enough, but this first parting from Mrs. Wix was much worse.
Fill in the gap: "She has other people than poor little YOU to think about, and has gone abroad ____________ them; so you needn't be in the least afraid she'll stickle this time for her rights."
Fill in the gap: It added to this odd security that she had once heard a gentleman say to him as if it were a great joke and in obvious reference to Miss Overmore: "Hanged if she'll let another woman come near you--hanged if she ever will. She'd let fly a stick _____ her as they do at a strange cat!"
Fill in the gap: Maisie greatly preferred gentlemen as inmates in spite ___________ their also having their way--louder but sooner over—of laughing out at her.
Fill in the gap: She puzzled out with imperfect signs, but with a prodigious spirit, that she had been a centre ____________ hatred and a messenger of insult, and that everything was bad because she had been employed to make it so.
Fill in the gap: She spoiled their fun, but she practically added ___________ her own.
Fill in the gap: She would forget everything, she would repeat nothing, and when, as a tribute to the successful application __________ her system, she began to be called a little idiot, she tasted a pleasure new and keen.
Fill in the gap: The ladies _______ the other hand addressed her as "You poor pet" and scarcely touched her even to kiss her. But it was of the ladies she was most afraid.
Fill in the gap: They pulled and pinched, they teased and tickled her; some of them even, as they termed it, shied things at her, and all of them thought it funny to call her ______ names having no resemblance to her own.
Fill in the gap: This was the question that worried our young lady and that Miss Overmore's confidences and the frequent observations ____________ her employer only rendered more mystifying.
Fill in the gap: What at last, however, was in this connexion bewildering and a little frightening was the dawn __________ a suspicion that a better way had been found to torment Mr. Farange than to deprive him of his periodical burden.
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The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) "Poor little monkey!" she at last exclaimed; and the words were an epitaph for the tomb of Maisie's childhood.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) No, because you detest him so much that you'll always talk to her about him.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) She was abandoned to her fate.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) The good lady, for a moment, made no reply: her silence was a grim judgement of the whole point of view.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) What was clear to any spectator was that the only link binding her to either parent was this lamentable fact of her being a ready vessel for bitterness, a deep little porcelain cup in which biting acids could be mixed.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are) You'll keep him before her by perpetually abusing him.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): At present, while Mrs. Wix's arms tightened and the smell of her hair was strong, she further remembered how, in pacifying Miss Overmore, papa had made use of the words "you dear old duck!"--an expression which, by its oddity, had stuck fast in her young mind, having moreover a place well prepared for it there by what she knew of the governess whom she now always mentally characterised as the pretty one.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): For Maisie moreover concealment had never necessarily seemed deception; she had grown up among things as to which her foremost knowledge was that she was never to ask about them.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): It was far from new to her that the questions of the small are the peculiar diversion of the great: except the affairs of her doll Lisette there had scarcely ever been anything at her mother's that was explicable with a grave face.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): Maisie looked from one of her companions to the other; this was the freshest gayest start she had yet enjoyed, but she had a shy fear of not exactly believing them.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): Miss Overmore, then also in the vestibule, but of course in the other one, had been thoroughly audible and voluble; her protest had rung out bravely and she had declared that something--her pupil didn't know exactly what—was a regular wicked shame.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): Moddle's desire was merely that she shouldn't do that, and she met it so easily that the only spots in that long brightness were the moments of her met would become of her if, on her rushing back, there should be no Moddle on the bench.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): She found out what it was: it was a congenital tendency to the production of a substance to which Moddle, her nurse, gave a short ugly name, a name painfully associated at dinner with the part of the joint that she didn't like.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): She had left behind her the time when she had no desires to meet, none at least save Moddle's, who, in Kensington Gardens, was always on the bench when she came back to see if she had been playing too far.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): She remembered the difference when, six months before, she had been torn from the breast of that more spirited protectress.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): She wondered whether this affection would be as great as before: that would at all events be the case with the prettiness Maisie could see in the face which showed brightly at the window of the brougham.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): That had at the time dimly recalled to Maisie the far-away moment of Moddle's great outbreak: there seemed always to be "shames" connected in one way or another with her migrations.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): The confidence looked for by that young lady was of the fine sort that explanation can't improve, and she herself at any rate was a person superior to any confusion.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): The word stuck in her mind and contributed to her feeling from this time that she was deficient in something that would meet the general desire.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): They still went to the Gardens, but there was a difference even there; she was impelled perpetually to look at the legs of other children and ask her nurse if THEY were toothpicks.
The predicate(s) of the sentence is (are): Thus from the first Maisie not only felt it, but knew she felt it.
The sentence is: Even at that moment, however, she had a scared anticipation of fatigue, a guilty sense of not rising to the occasion, feeling the charm of the violence with which the stiff unopened envelopes, whose big monograms--Ida bristled with monograms--she would have liked to see, were made to whizz, like dangerous missiles, throughthe air.
The sentence is: Her features had somehow become prominent; they were so perpetually nipped by the gentlemen who came to see her father and the smoke of whose cigarettes went into her face.
The sentence is: Her little world was phantasmagoric--strange shadows dancing on a sheet.
The sentence is: It was as if the whole performance had been given for her--a mite of a half-scared infant in a great dim theatre.
The sentence is: Only a drummer-boy in a ballad or a story could have been so in the thick of the fight.
The sentence is: Some of these gentlemen made her strike matches and light their cigarettes; others, holding her on knees violently jolted, pinched the calves of her legs till she shrieked--her shriek was much admired--and reproached them with being toothpicks.
The sentence is: The greatest effect of the great cause was her own greater importance, chiefly revealed to her in the larger freedom with which she was handled, pulled hither and thither and kissed, and the proportionately greater niceness she was obliged to show.
The sentence refers to: "Won't it be enough of a change for her?"
The sentence refers to: Apparently, however, the circle of the Faranges had been scanned in vain for any such ornament; so that the only solution finally meeting all the difficulties was, save that of sending Maisie to a Home, the partition of the tutelary office in the manner I have mentioned.
The sentence refers to: She was divided in two and the portions tossed impartially to the disputants.
The sentence refers to: The father, who, though bespattered from head to foot, had made good his case, was, in pursuance of this triumph, appointed to keep her: it was not so much that the mother's character had been more absolutely damaged as that the brilliancy of a lady's complexion (and this lady's, in court, was immensely remarked) might be more regarded as showing the spots.
The sentence refers to: The obligation thus attributed to her adversary was no small balm to Ida's resentment; it drew a part of the sting from her defeat and compelled Mr. Farange perceptibly to lower his crest.
The sentence refers to: This was odd justice in the eyes of those who still blinked in the fierce light projected from the tribunal—a light in which neither parent figured in the least as a happy example to youth and innocence.
The sentence refers to: This would make every time, for Maisie, after her inevitable six months with Beale, much more of a change.
The sentence refers to: What was to have been expected on the evidence was the nomination, _in loco parentis_, of some proper third person, some respectable or at least some presentable friend.
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