Saturday, March 21, 2020
Free Essays on The Invisible Man
J. R. Hammond once said, ââ¬Å"It is perhaps difficult for a twentieth-century reader to recapture the sense of excitement which must have been experienced by those who read the Invisible Man for the first time on its publication as a serial in Pearsonââ¬â¢s Weekly in the summer of 1897 and as a book in the autumn of that year.â⬠Yet, to a contemporary reader, it is also apparent that this novel does not purely narrate a story about a selfish young scientist-a hunter who is hunted at last. We can capture the authorââ¬â¢s profound thoughts if we look through the disguise of the science fiction color. Its thesis is the conflicts between group and the individual and the conflicts begin as soon as the secret of invisibility becomes public. When first reading the Invisible Man, readers will find the title itself resonant, dangerous; although its resonance may have become a little muted through repetition after more than a century in print. Simmering in their mind are mainly two questions, one theological and one sociological: What if a man could be invisible yet still active in society? And, what would this man do without the public observing? Griffin, the young chemist and physicist, discovers the secret of invisibility and becomes transparent himself. When imagining an invisible man walking on the street freely, we may feel amused and curious first due to the fact that many of us have ever fancied ourselves invisible- sometimes we find ourselves naked going through the crowd in our dreams. But later on the second thought, we will find a lack of both privacy and security because an invisible man means a disembodied voice, a walking emptiness who can witness whatever you do, a threat both anarchic and extremely terrifying, which means he can do anything he wants on one hand and he could be right next to you on the other hand. Furthermore, people will consider him as a threat to the human beingsââ¬â¢ normal life in which people live harmonio... Free Essays on The Invisible Man Free Essays on The Invisible Man J. R. Hammond once said, ââ¬Å"It is perhaps difficult for a twentieth-century reader to recapture the sense of excitement which must have been experienced by those who read the Invisible Man for the first time on its publication as a serial in Pearsonââ¬â¢s Weekly in the summer of 1897 and as a book in the autumn of that year.â⬠Yet, to a contemporary reader, it is also apparent that this novel does not purely narrate a story about a selfish young scientist-a hunter who is hunted at last. We can capture the authorââ¬â¢s profound thoughts if we look through the disguise of the science fiction color. Its thesis is the conflicts between group and the individual and the conflicts begin as soon as the secret of invisibility becomes public. When first reading the Invisible Man, readers will find the title itself resonant, dangerous; although its resonance may have become a little muted through repetition after more than a century in print. Simmering in their mind are mainly two questions, one theological and one sociological: What if a man could be invisible yet still active in society? And, what would this man do without the public observing? Griffin, the young chemist and physicist, discovers the secret of invisibility and becomes transparent himself. When imagining an invisible man walking on the street freely, we may feel amused and curious first due to the fact that many of us have ever fancied ourselves invisible- sometimes we find ourselves naked going through the crowd in our dreams. But later on the second thought, we will find a lack of both privacy and security because an invisible man means a disembodied voice, a walking emptiness who can witness whatever you do, a threat both anarchic and extremely terrifying, which means he can do anything he wants on one hand and he could be right next to you on the other hand. Furthermore, people will consider him as a threat to the human beingsââ¬â¢ normal life in which people live harmonio...
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Punctuation Marks Part 1
Punctuation Marks Part 1 The German word for dot, point or period,à der Punkt, and the English wordà punctuationà both have the same Latin source:à punctumà (point). Among many other things that German and English have in common are the punctuation marks they use. And the reason most punctuation marks look and sound the same is that many of the signs and some of the terms, such asà der Apostroph,à das Kommaandà das Kolonà (and Englishà period, hyphen), are of common Greek origin. The period or full stop (der Punkt) dates back to antiquity. It was used in Roman inscriptions to separate words or phrases. The term question mark (das Fragezeichen) is only about 150 years old, but the ? symbol is much older and was earlier known as the mark of interrogation. The question mark is a descendant of theà punctus interrogativusà used in 10th-century religious manuscripts. It was originally used to indicate voice inflection. (Greek used and still uses a colon/semicolon to indicate a question.) The Greek termsà kà ³mmaà andà kà ³lonà originally referred to parts of lines of verse (Greekà strophe, Germanà die Strophe) and only later came to mean the punctuation marks that demarcated such segments in prose. The most recent punctuation marks to appear were quotation marks (Anfà ¼hrungszeichen)- in the eighteenth century. Fortunately for English-speakers, German generally uses the same punctuation marks in the same way that English does. However, there are some minor and a few major differences in the way the two languages use common punctuation marks. ââ¬Å¾ Der Bandwurmsatz ist die Nationalkrankheitunseres Prosastils.â⬠à - Ludwig Reiners Before we look at the details of punctuation in German, letââ¬â¢s define some our terms. Here are some of the more common punctuation marks in German and English. Since America and Britain are ââ¬Å"two countries separated by a common languageâ⬠(G.B. Shaw), I have indicated the American (AE) and British (BE) terms for items that differ. SatzzeichenGerman Punctuation Marks Deutsch English Zeichen die Anfhrungszeichen 1Gnsefchen (geese feet) quotation marks 1speech marks (BE) die Anfhrungszeichen 2chevron, franzsische (French) quotation marks 2French guillemets die Auslassungspunkte ellipses dots, ommission marks ... das Ausrufezeichen exclamation mark ! der Apostroph apostrophe der Bindestrich hyphen - der Doppelpunktdas Kolon colon : der Ergnzungsstrich dash - das Fragezeichen question mark ? der Gedankenstrich long dash runde Klammern parentheses (AE)round brackets (BE) ( ) eckige Klammern brackets [ ] das Komma comma , der Punkt period (AE)full stop (BE) . das Semikolon semicolon ; Note:à In German books, periodicals, and other printed materials you will see both kinds of quotation marks (type 1 or 2). While newspapers generally use type 1, many modern books use type 2 (French) marks. à Part 2: Differences German versus English Punctuation In most cases, German and English punctuation are similar or identical. But here are a few key differences: 1. Anfà ¼hrungszeichenà (Quotation Marks) A. German uses two types of quotation marks in printing. ââ¬Å"Chevronâ⬠style marks (French ââ¬Å"guillemetsâ⬠) are often used in modern books: Er sagte: à «Wir gehen am Dienstag.à »orEr sagte: à »Wir gehen am Dienstag.à « In writing, in newspapers, and in many printed documents German also uses quotation marks that are similar to English except that the opening quotation mark is below rather than above: Er sagte: ââ¬Å¾Wir gehen am Dienstag.â⬠(Note that unlike English, German introduces a direct quotation with a colon rather than a comma.) In email, on the Web, and in hand-written correspondence, German-speakers today often use normal international quotation marks (ââ¬Å" â⬠) or even single quote marks (ââ¬Ë ââ¬â¢). B. When ending a quotation with ââ¬Å"he saidâ⬠or ââ¬Å"she asked,â⬠German follows British-English style punctuation, placing the comma outside of the quotation mark rather than inside, as in American English: ââ¬Å¾Das war damals in Berlinâ⬠, sagte Paul. ââ¬Å¾Kommst du mit?â⬠, fragte Luisa. C. German uses quotation marks in some instances where English would useà italicsà (Kursiv). Quotation marks are used in English for the titles of poems, articles, short stories, songs and TV shows. German expands this to the titles of books, novels, films, dramatic works and the names of newspapers or magazines, which would be italicized (or underlined in writing) in English:à ââ¬Å¾Fiestaâ⬠(ââ¬Å¾The Sun Also Risesâ⬠) ist ein Roman von Ernest Hemingway. - Ich las den Artikel ââ¬Å¾Die Arbeitslosigkeit in Deutschlandâ⬠in der ââ¬Å¾Berliner Morgenpostâ⬠. D. German uses single quotation marks (halbe Anfà ¼hrungszeichen) for a quotation within a quotation in the same way English does:à ââ¬Å¾Das ist eine Zeile aus Goethes ,Erlkà ¶nigââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ , sagte er. Also see item 4B below for more about quotations in German. 2. Apostrophà (Apostrophe) A. German generally does not use an apostrophe to show genitive possession (Karls Haus, Marias Buch), but there is an exception to this rule when a name or noun ends in an s-sound (spelledà -s, ss, -ß, -tz, -z, -x, -ce). In such cases, instead of adding an s, the possessive form ends with an apostrophe:à Felixââ¬â¢ Auto, Aristotelesââ¬â¢ Werke, Aliceââ¬â¢ Haus.à - Note: There is a disturbing trend among less well-educated German-speakers not only to use apostrophes as in English, but even in situations in which they would not be used in English, such as anglicized plurals (die Callgirlââ¬â¢s). B. Like English, German also uses the apostrophe to indicate missing letters in contractions, slang, dialect, idiomatic expressions or poetic phrases:à der Kuââ¬â¢damm (Kurfà ¼rstendamm), ich habââ¬â¢ (habe), in wenââ¬â¢gen Minuten (wenigen), wie gehtââ¬â¢s? (geht es), Bitte, nehmen Sââ¬â¢ (Sie) Platz!à But German does not use an apostrophe in some common contractions with definite articles:à ins (in das), zum (zu dem). 3. Kommaà (Comma) A. German often uses commas in the same way as English. However, German may use a comma to link two independent clauses without a conjunction (and, but, or), where English would require either a semicolon or a period:à In dem alten Haus war es ganz still, ich stand angstvoll vor der Tà ¼r.But in German you also have the option of using a semicolon or a period in these situations. B. While a comma is optional in English at the end of a series ending with and/or, it is never used in German:à Hans, Julia und Frank kommen mit. C. Under the reformed spelling rules (Rechtschreibreform), German uses far fewer commas than with the old rules. In many cases where a comma was formerly required, it is now optional. For instance, infinitive phrases that were previously always set off by a comma can now go without one:à Er ging(,) ohne ein Wort zu sagen.à In many other cases where English would use a comma, German does not. D. In numerical expressions German uses a comma where English uses a decimal point:à â⠬19,95 (19.95 euros)à In large numbers, German uses either a space or a decimal point to divide thousands:à 8 540 000 or 8.540.000 8,540,000à (For more on prices, see item 4C below.) 4. Gedankenstrichà (Dash, Long Dash) A. German uses the dash or long dash in much the same way as English to indicate a pause, a delayed continuation or to indicate a contrast:à Plà ¶tzlich - eine unheimliche Stille. B. German uses a dash to indicate a change in the speaker when there are no quotation marks:Karl, komm bitte doch her! - Ja, ich komme sofort. C. German uses a dash or long dash in prices where English uses double zero/naught: â⠬5,- (5.00 euros)
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