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saxonism การใช้

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  • Neither does his fierce criticism of American protectionism arise from any instinct toward anti-Anglo-Saxonism, a fashionable attitude in France.
  • It re-entered academic English through the invention of the word " folklore " in 1846 by the antiquarian Anglo-Saxonism.
  • Washington Irving slapped the nickname on Manhattan in the early 19th century ( and it may be the only Anglo-Saxonism not routinely heard today on the sidewalks of New York ).
  • These scholars had more intellectual, political, and chronological distance from the events on the late eighteenth century; but writing during a time of massive immigration from Eastern and Southern Europe, Anglo-Saxonism tainted their writings.
  • This is obviously Parliament, champion of its own liberties and jealous of any royal dictation, citing some obscure Anglo-Saxonism which hardly existed before expedient excuses were wanting . talk ) 09 : 21, 14 July 2009 ( UTC)
  • Employing the past tense of a familiar anglo-saxonism in such a way as to remind you as much as possible of Fastcompany . com, this page offers a daily diet of amusingly-written " facts, rumors and other dot . com doom stories ."
  • In addition, Cooper's particular version of Anglo-Saxonism, with its strong focus on teaching and learning, is isomorphic to the ideology of adult / child power relations represented in the novels, an ideology that puts great weight on the value of obedience to authority.
  • One much e-mailed missive features a faux Time magazine cover with a photo of Bush and a headline that proclaims : " We are ( expletive ) " Another fairly bristles with fury, repeatedly using the same Anglo-Saxonism in its verb form to virulently attack the South, which went solidly for Bush.
  • Fred C . Robinson wrote that it " should be read by all medievalists who care about their profession . " In 1994 Frantzen was the keynote speaker at a conference at the University of California, Berkeley that was published as " Anglo-Saxonism and the Construction of Social Identity " ( 1997 ).
  • In France Anglo-Saxonism is held responsible not just for all the wickedness of global capitalism, but also, to judge by a recent trawl through the French press, for espionage ( the Echelon scandal ), pragmatism ( ugh ), experimental empiricism ( ugh, ugh ), the adversarial judicial system ( far inferior to the French alternative ) and transparency ( no, not ooh-la-la, alas ).
  • Professor Michael D . C . Drout argues that Cooper makes greater " use of Anglo-Saxon source materials " than other critics have identified : " Cooper's uses of Anglo-Saxon sources are allusions that fit into a schema of history rather than ( in the words of one reviewer ) being merely tossed " pell-mell " into the mythical pot . . . It is Cooper's Anglo-Saxonism, I argue, which generates the notions of British national identity explicated in the novels, notions that contradict the author's overt political stance.