เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

kiplingesque การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • My poor memory tells me that it is a Kipling story and certainly the flavour of the story and its politics is Kiplingesque.
  • At the same time, the results underscore that the meaning of beauty is still up for grabs and open to any number of Kiplingesque Just-So interpretations.
  • But while that Kiplingesque tone seems grandly archaic now, in Ricketts'view it makes Kipling much more of an outsider to standard imperial pride than is often thought.
  • Past designs of Tori Richard s apparel include images of maps, ocean sports, Kiplingesque animals and abstract designs, as well as crisp paisleys and tapa motifs in various fabrications.
  • There are a couple of Kiplingesque fables, a tale in the manner of " The Arabian Nights, " a long, scabrous and hilarious account of a post-structuralist academic controversy.
  • 1969 : " Carry on up the Khyber " is the sixteenth Kiplingesque " movies and television series about life in the British Empire, both contemporary and from earlier, Hollywood, periods.
  • Unlike the orotund elegance of " Jamesian, " for example, or the insinuative darkness of " Kafkaesque, " the word " Kiplingesque " has something comic and preposterous about it now.
  • ""'Carry On Up the Khyber " "'is the sixteenth in Kiplingesque movies and television series about life in the British Raj, both contemporary and from earlier, Hollywood, periods.
  • The 244-page book, which was published last fall, includes stories from the Old Testament and the Apocrypha as told by Ms . Lea, who has recounted these stories to students in her British accent and Kiplingesque style for more than 30 years.
  • I at once recognized the Kiplingesque touch in the two longer lines ( of the last stanza ); but I knew that in the stanza the American Negro was, historically and spiritually, immanent, and I decided to let it stand as it was written.
  • This story is a Kiplingesque investigation-that is to say a strange combination of close observation, some mild satire of the strangeness of social conventions, and an acceptance of their strangeness, from the rather distant stance of an observer-of matters of love and marriage.
  • Kipling left India for good in 1889 and, in his years living in the United States and England, he quickly became Kiplingesque, the most visible exponent of muscular, nationalistic literary rhapsody, tempered by a kind of patronizing large-mindedness : " You're a better man than I am Gunga Din ."