grammar wiki
student-sourced examples of sentences demonstrating interesting grammar, mechanics, and usage
drawn from course readings
verb tenses
Ipek Turan
1. Present Perfect: Many white Southerners have wanted to have it both way.
2. Simple Future: People will think spatially and historically.
3. Simple Present: But Americans seldom portray The South that way
Hamilton Chen
1. Present Continuous: now, many more blacks are moving to the South than are leaving.
2. Present Perfect: Given all that has been written and said about the South, we might expect that Americans would be able to think clearly about the region.
3. Past Perfect: "because everyone would think someone else had written it for me, probably so I wouldn't have to memorize it."[1]
4.Simple Present: These white Southerners believe they live in the best part of the United States.
Tianzhi (Tansy) Xu
1. Past Continuous: For as long as people have believed there was a South they have also believed it was disappearing.
2. Present Perfect: North and South have conspired to create each other's identity as well as their own.
3. Simple Future: People will think spatially and historically.
4. Past Perfect: England had not threatened to leave the nation before Southerners considered such a move.
Tianyi Song (Robin)
1.Simple Past: For decades after slavery, black Southerners escaped the South at the first opportunity.
2.Present Perfect: Some African Americans have found that the South exerts the emotional pull of a homeland.
3.Past Future Perfect: While people long predicted some sort of conflict, few people, North or South, would have predicted anything that like the war that occurred.
4.Simple Present: The Confederate flag embodies the conflict.
Qiaochu Dai
1. Present perfectPerhaps reflecting such views, the tide of black migration has turned.
2. simple past: For decades after slavery, black Southerners escaped the South at the first opportunity.
3. present continuous: now, many more blacks are moving to the South than are leaving.
Wenda Xu
1. Past Perfect: we equate The North with The Union for generations beforehand, as if New England had not threatened to leave the nation before Southerners considered such a move
2. Simple present: Yes, I am from the South.
3. Present Perfect: Throughout the modern era, traditions have been invented on the spot-the kilt, for example
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Past Continuous: I had no time to dawdle, since my grandparents were waiting for me, so I stopped in for a fast burger at the new Hardee's on the bypass.
2. Present Perfect Continuous: The bucket of Southern distinctiveness, it appears, was full up to the brim in 1865 but has been leaking faster and faster ever since.
3. Present Perfect: Many white Southerners have wanted to have it both ways: to be staunch Americans, proud of the nation state, and to be true Southerners, unashamed of their forefathers' rebellion.
Omer Ersin
1)Past Perfect: "some African Americans have found..."
2)Simple Past: "black Southerners escaped the South..."
3)Simple Present: " People realize that when they speak of 'Southern culture'..."
1. Present Perfect: Many white Southerners have wanted to have it both way.
2. Simple Future: People will think spatially and historically.
3. Simple Present: But Americans seldom portray The South that way
Hamilton Chen
1. Present Continuous: now, many more blacks are moving to the South than are leaving.
2. Present Perfect: Given all that has been written and said about the South, we might expect that Americans would be able to think clearly about the region.
3. Past Perfect: "because everyone would think someone else had written it for me, probably so I wouldn't have to memorize it."[1]
4.Simple Present: These white Southerners believe they live in the best part of the United States.
Tianzhi (Tansy) Xu
1. Past Continuous: For as long as people have believed there was a South they have also believed it was disappearing.
2. Present Perfect: North and South have conspired to create each other's identity as well as their own.
3. Simple Future: People will think spatially and historically.
4. Past Perfect: England had not threatened to leave the nation before Southerners considered such a move.
Tianyi Song (Robin)
1.Simple Past: For decades after slavery, black Southerners escaped the South at the first opportunity.
2.Present Perfect: Some African Americans have found that the South exerts the emotional pull of a homeland.
3.Past Future Perfect: While people long predicted some sort of conflict, few people, North or South, would have predicted anything that like the war that occurred.
4.Simple Present: The Confederate flag embodies the conflict.
Qiaochu Dai
1. Present perfectPerhaps reflecting such views, the tide of black migration has turned.
2. simple past: For decades after slavery, black Southerners escaped the South at the first opportunity.
3. present continuous: now, many more blacks are moving to the South than are leaving.
Wenda Xu
1. Past Perfect: we equate The North with The Union for generations beforehand, as if New England had not threatened to leave the nation before Southerners considered such a move
2. Simple present: Yes, I am from the South.
3. Present Perfect: Throughout the modern era, traditions have been invented on the spot-the kilt, for example
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Past Continuous: I had no time to dawdle, since my grandparents were waiting for me, so I stopped in for a fast burger at the new Hardee's on the bypass.
2. Present Perfect Continuous: The bucket of Southern distinctiveness, it appears, was full up to the brim in 1865 but has been leaking faster and faster ever since.
3. Present Perfect: Many white Southerners have wanted to have it both ways: to be staunch Americans, proud of the nation state, and to be true Southerners, unashamed of their forefathers' rebellion.
Omer Ersin
1)Past Perfect: "some African Americans have found..."
2)Simple Past: "black Southerners escaped the South..."
3)Simple Present: " People realize that when they speak of 'Southern culture'..."
verb forms
Hamilton Chen
1.Past participle: By the middle of the nineteenth century, however, ardor for the southern fantasy had waned considerably(for the time being at least) among whites in the North, giving way to a vision of the south as not merely a benign aberration from the American norm but an invasive, potentially mortal threat to the nation's health and progress.
2.Past tense: In reality, however, the South's differences with America were defined largely in terms of its differences with the North.
3. Ing form: A leading proponent of the Slave Power thesis, William H. Seward cited everything from the three-fifths compromise to the wars to secure Florida, the Louisiana Territory, Texas, and the Southwest for slavery expansion, to southern designs on Cuba and Central America as proof of his point.
4. s form: Historian Larry Gara has argued that Webster got his wish with the rise of "a self-conscious North" after the 1848 election.
Omer Ersin
1.Past Tense: As Eric Foner wrote, there was no doubt that many Republicans believed the South was"an alien and threatening society whose values and interests were in fundamental conflict with those of North."
2..Past Participle: Bertram Wyatt-Brown has argued that perhaps the most crucial difference between North and South...
3.Ing-Form: "as people, have conflicting interests and ambitions and unappeasable jealousies."
Ipek Turan
1.Ing-Form: By the middle of the nineteenth century,however, ardor for the southern fantasy had waned considerably among whites in the North, giving way to a vision of the South as not merely a benign aberration from the American norm but an invasive, potentially mortal threat to the nation's health and progress.
2.Past Tense: In reality, although a new spirit of critical self-awareness had clearly emerged in the South during the first decade of the war.
3.Past Participle: King has characterised Go Down, Moses as the culminating expression of "Faulkner's exploration of historical consciousness"
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. Past Tense: As Eric wrote, there was no doubt that many Republicans believed the South was "an alien and threatening society whose values and interests were in fundamental conflict with those of the North".
2. Present Participle: Here again, filtering one's retrospective on the antebellum South through the outcome of the Civil War can be risky.
3. -s Form: Bertram Wyatt-Brown has argued that perhaps the most crucial difference between North and South was not reflected in economic or social statistics.
4. Past Participle: As early as 1835, Louis Phillipe had warned that the Puritan-Cvalier polarity meant that Americans "as a people, have conflicting interests and amtions and unappeasable jealousies."
Tianyi Song (Robin)
Past Participle: Abolitionist Angelina, who had long since abandoned her native Charleston, had seen the sexual licentiousness bred by slavery exerting “a wide influence on Northern character.”
Past: William concluded that because education had long been seen as primarily “northern” in both origins and purpose, the South’s white elite chose to withhold it from almost everyone.
Ing-form: Conservatives argued for restricting the franchise to taxpayers or reducing the number of elective offices.
s-form: Potter’s approach seems particularly appropriate.
Qiaochu Dai
Ing-Form: As early as 1845 Seward was arguing that it should be left up .
Past tense: The same was true of Republican designs abroad.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
Ing-form: Northern leaders had been asking themselves the same question for some time.
Past tense: By this, he meant a northeastern-midwestern alliance "strong in opinion and united against slavery."
Past Participle: "the...Republican party has now become the North"
s-form: Beyond that, the experience of the Confederacy suggests as well that the inhabitants of a nation-state may actually come together as a nation for reasons other than a strong common allegiance to the nation-state itself.
Wenda Xu
1.ing-form: The south was urbanizing and industrilializing more rapidly than any other Western Society
2.Past Tense:Nowhere was this contradiction more apparent than in the attitudes and arguments of those who aggressively propounded the merits of slavery.
Campbell Lin
1. Past Participle and Irregular Past: Southern enrollment at the University of Pennsylvania had peaked in 1840 at 281, but there were still 222 southerners studying there in 1860
2. ing-form: Scholars have long argued that establishing a nation-state as a duly constituted political absolute may be much easier than molding those living within that nation-state into a "nation."
1.Past participle: By the middle of the nineteenth century, however, ardor for the southern fantasy had waned considerably(for the time being at least) among whites in the North, giving way to a vision of the south as not merely a benign aberration from the American norm but an invasive, potentially mortal threat to the nation's health and progress.
2.Past tense: In reality, however, the South's differences with America were defined largely in terms of its differences with the North.
3. Ing form: A leading proponent of the Slave Power thesis, William H. Seward cited everything from the three-fifths compromise to the wars to secure Florida, the Louisiana Territory, Texas, and the Southwest for slavery expansion, to southern designs on Cuba and Central America as proof of his point.
4. s form: Historian Larry Gara has argued that Webster got his wish with the rise of "a self-conscious North" after the 1848 election.
Omer Ersin
1.Past Tense: As Eric Foner wrote, there was no doubt that many Republicans believed the South was"an alien and threatening society whose values and interests were in fundamental conflict with those of North."
2..Past Participle: Bertram Wyatt-Brown has argued that perhaps the most crucial difference between North and South...
3.Ing-Form: "as people, have conflicting interests and ambitions and unappeasable jealousies."
Ipek Turan
1.Ing-Form: By the middle of the nineteenth century,however, ardor for the southern fantasy had waned considerably among whites in the North, giving way to a vision of the South as not merely a benign aberration from the American norm but an invasive, potentially mortal threat to the nation's health and progress.
2.Past Tense: In reality, although a new spirit of critical self-awareness had clearly emerged in the South during the first decade of the war.
3.Past Participle: King has characterised Go Down, Moses as the culminating expression of "Faulkner's exploration of historical consciousness"
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. Past Tense: As Eric wrote, there was no doubt that many Republicans believed the South was "an alien and threatening society whose values and interests were in fundamental conflict with those of the North".
2. Present Participle: Here again, filtering one's retrospective on the antebellum South through the outcome of the Civil War can be risky.
3. -s Form: Bertram Wyatt-Brown has argued that perhaps the most crucial difference between North and South was not reflected in economic or social statistics.
4. Past Participle: As early as 1835, Louis Phillipe had warned that the Puritan-Cvalier polarity meant that Americans "as a people, have conflicting interests and amtions and unappeasable jealousies."
Tianyi Song (Robin)
Past Participle: Abolitionist Angelina, who had long since abandoned her native Charleston, had seen the sexual licentiousness bred by slavery exerting “a wide influence on Northern character.”
Past: William concluded that because education had long been seen as primarily “northern” in both origins and purpose, the South’s white elite chose to withhold it from almost everyone.
Ing-form: Conservatives argued for restricting the franchise to taxpayers or reducing the number of elective offices.
s-form: Potter’s approach seems particularly appropriate.
Qiaochu Dai
Ing-Form: As early as 1845 Seward was arguing that it should be left up .
Past tense: The same was true of Republican designs abroad.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
Ing-form: Northern leaders had been asking themselves the same question for some time.
Past tense: By this, he meant a northeastern-midwestern alliance "strong in opinion and united against slavery."
Past Participle: "the...Republican party has now become the North"
s-form: Beyond that, the experience of the Confederacy suggests as well that the inhabitants of a nation-state may actually come together as a nation for reasons other than a strong common allegiance to the nation-state itself.
Wenda Xu
1.ing-form: The south was urbanizing and industrilializing more rapidly than any other Western Society
2.Past Tense:Nowhere was this contradiction more apparent than in the attitudes and arguments of those who aggressively propounded the merits of slavery.
Campbell Lin
1. Past Participle and Irregular Past: Southern enrollment at the University of Pennsylvania had peaked in 1840 at 281, but there were still 222 southerners studying there in 1860
2. ing-form: Scholars have long argued that establishing a nation-state as a duly constituted political absolute may be much easier than molding those living within that nation-state into a "nation."
modals
Hamilton Chen
1.could: The light-skinned Christmas could have done this, but instead he challenges the New South identity's rigid insistence on racial separation by attempting to be both black and white.
Ipek Turan
1.Could: Southern writers began to ask how such an appealing and glorious past could have degenerated into such a dismal and defective present.
2.Can: How can I who have taken the life of my friend, take the life of an enemy, for I used up my blood.
Wenda Xu
1.Should the slaveholders, more criminal than common murderers, try to use force against them, Helper felt confident that the negroes in nine cases out of ten, would be delighted with the opportunity to cut their master's throat.
2.In turn, actually led to the destruction of their nation-state before it could become truly institutionalized.
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. Would: In the Hamlet (1940), Faulkner began
Tianyi Song (Robin)
1. Could: Some black activists argued that regardless of gender, black writers could better serve the interests of their race.
2. May: Although he may remain invisible to others, the young man has gained "self-visibility".
3. Can: He can now see his own heritage, his humanistic, Afro-American, Southern folkness.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Might: The same might have been said of Warren's African American literary contemporaries as well.
2. Should: These similarities should not be surprising.
1.could: The light-skinned Christmas could have done this, but instead he challenges the New South identity's rigid insistence on racial separation by attempting to be both black and white.
Ipek Turan
1.Could: Southern writers began to ask how such an appealing and glorious past could have degenerated into such a dismal and defective present.
2.Can: How can I who have taken the life of my friend, take the life of an enemy, for I used up my blood.
Wenda Xu
1.Should the slaveholders, more criminal than common murderers, try to use force against them, Helper felt confident that the negroes in nine cases out of ten, would be delighted with the opportunity to cut their master's throat.
2.In turn, actually led to the destruction of their nation-state before it could become truly institutionalized.
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. Would: In the Hamlet (1940), Faulkner began
Tianyi Song (Robin)
1. Could: Some black activists argued that regardless of gender, black writers could better serve the interests of their race.
2. May: Although he may remain invisible to others, the young man has gained "self-visibility".
3. Can: He can now see his own heritage, his humanistic, Afro-American, Southern folkness.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Might: The same might have been said of Warren's African American literary contemporaries as well.
2. Should: These similarities should not be surprising.
conditionals
Ipek Turan
1. I said if you'd just let her alone.
2. If it had just been me when Cash fell off of that church and if it had just been me when pa laid sick with that load of wood fell on him, it would not be happening with every bastard in the country coming in to stare at her because if there is a God what the hell is he for.
3. You could do so much for me if you just would.
Tansy Xu
1. "You can stay there all day tomorrow, if you want." I said.
2. I be durn if it didn't give me the creeps, even when I didn't know yet.
3. I reckon if there's ere a man or woman anywhere that he could turn it all over to go away with his mind at rest, it would be Cora.
Omer Ersin
1.She can't know if there is no sin in her hearth.
2."Fore god if there were ere a man in the living world..."
Campbell Lin
If it is His will that some folks has different ideas of honesty from other folks, it is not my place to question His decree.
If we were deaf we could almost watch her face and hear him, see him.
Jewel says, "you can quit now, if you got a-plenty."
Wenda Xu
1.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. It's like when he was a little boy and she says if she had some fertilizer she would try to raise some flowers and he taken the bread pan and brought it back from the barn full of dung.
2. Because I said if you wouldn't keep on sawing and nailing at it until a man can't sleep even and her hands laying in the quilt like two of them roots dug up and tried to wash and you couldn't get them clean.
3. He tells people if he ever sweats, he will die.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Because I said will I or wont I when the sack was half full because I said if the sack is full when we get to the woods it wont be me.
2. If I jump I can go through it like the pink lady in the circus, into the warm smelling, without having to wait my hands grab at the bushes;beneath my feet the rocks and dirt go rubbling down.
3. If I could just feel it, it would be different, because I would not be alone.
Qiaochu Dai
1. If we were deaf we could almost watch her face and and hear him, see him.
2. You can quit now, if you got a-plenty.
1. I said if you'd just let her alone.
2. If it had just been me when Cash fell off of that church and if it had just been me when pa laid sick with that load of wood fell on him, it would not be happening with every bastard in the country coming in to stare at her because if there is a God what the hell is he for.
3. You could do so much for me if you just would.
Tansy Xu
1. "You can stay there all day tomorrow, if you want." I said.
2. I be durn if it didn't give me the creeps, even when I didn't know yet.
3. I reckon if there's ere a man or woman anywhere that he could turn it all over to go away with his mind at rest, it would be Cora.
Omer Ersin
1.She can't know if there is no sin in her hearth.
2."Fore god if there were ere a man in the living world..."
Campbell Lin
If it is His will that some folks has different ideas of honesty from other folks, it is not my place to question His decree.
If we were deaf we could almost watch her face and hear him, see him.
Jewel says, "you can quit now, if you got a-plenty."
Wenda Xu
1.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. It's like when he was a little boy and she says if she had some fertilizer she would try to raise some flowers and he taken the bread pan and brought it back from the barn full of dung.
2. Because I said if you wouldn't keep on sawing and nailing at it until a man can't sleep even and her hands laying in the quilt like two of them roots dug up and tried to wash and you couldn't get them clean.
3. He tells people if he ever sweats, he will die.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Because I said will I or wont I when the sack was half full because I said if the sack is full when we get to the woods it wont be me.
2. If I jump I can go through it like the pink lady in the circus, into the warm smelling, without having to wait my hands grab at the bushes;beneath my feet the rocks and dirt go rubbling down.
3. If I could just feel it, it would be different, because I would not be alone.
Qiaochu Dai
1. If we were deaf we could almost watch her face and and hear him, see him.
2. You can quit now, if you got a-plenty.
iipassive + active voice
Ipek Turan
1. Active: Dewey Dell rises, heaving to her feet.
2.Passive: The wagon is hauled clear, the wheels chocked above the edge of the flood.
3. Active: The horse come up again.
4. Passive: Then he told a long tale about how the bridge was washed away and how the other bridge was gone too.
Omer Ersin
1.Active: Jewel watched him.
2.Passive: The wind's changed.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Passive: His teeth, set in pale gums, are parted a little as if he had been laughing quietly.
2. Active: Jewel lays the square down.
1.Passive: And so if I am not emptied yet, I am is
2.Active: Memory believes before knowing remembers
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Passive: We submerge in turn, holding to the rope, being clutched by one another.
2. Active: We watch the thick curling surface streaming away from us.
Hamilton Chen
1.
1. Active: Dewey Dell rises, heaving to her feet.
2.Passive: The wagon is hauled clear, the wheels chocked above the edge of the flood.
3. Active: The horse come up again.
4. Passive: Then he told a long tale about how the bridge was washed away and how the other bridge was gone too.
Omer Ersin
1.Active: Jewel watched him.
2.Passive: The wind's changed.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. Passive: His teeth, set in pale gums, are parted a little as if he had been laughing quietly.
2. Active: Jewel lays the square down.
1.Passive: And so if I am not emptied yet, I am is
2.Active: Memory believes before knowing remembers
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Passive: We submerge in turn, holding to the rope, being clutched by one another.
2. Active: We watch the thick curling surface streaming away from us.
Hamilton Chen
1.
sentence structure
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. "If it was just up, we could drive across."
2. He has not moved until then, and he turns and looks at me.
.3. We watch the thick curling surface, streaming away from us in slow whorls.
Weda Xu
1.I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth
2.It takes two people to make you, and one people to die. That's how the world is going to end
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. When Dewey Dell comes back the man comes with her.
2. Vardaman goes back down the road to where we crossed the branch and returns with sand.
3. It would be nice if you could just ravel out into time.
Ipek Turan
1. Since he lost his teeth, his mouth collapses in slow repetition when he dips.
2. When we reach it, I turn and follow the path which circles the house.
3. But after I talked to Rachel about them not having a regular man to fix her and it being July and all, I went back down to the barn and tried to talk to Bundren about it.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. If they were bent on going to Jefferson, I reckon they could have gone around up by Mount Veron, like MacCallum did.
2. When I used to sleep with Vardaman I had a nightmare.
3. After they passed I taken the mule out and looped up the trace chains and followed.
Omer Ersin
1.So he stopped there like he know her, before that little house was destroyed.
2. And now they deny me.
1. "If it was just up, we could drive across."
2. He has not moved until then, and he turns and looks at me.
.3. We watch the thick curling surface, streaming away from us in slow whorls.
Weda Xu
1.I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth
2.It takes two people to make you, and one people to die. That's how the world is going to end
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. When Dewey Dell comes back the man comes with her.
2. Vardaman goes back down the road to where we crossed the branch and returns with sand.
3. It would be nice if you could just ravel out into time.
Ipek Turan
1. Since he lost his teeth, his mouth collapses in slow repetition when he dips.
2. When we reach it, I turn and follow the path which circles the house.
3. But after I talked to Rachel about them not having a regular man to fix her and it being July and all, I went back down to the barn and tried to talk to Bundren about it.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. If they were bent on going to Jefferson, I reckon they could have gone around up by Mount Veron, like MacCallum did.
2. When I used to sleep with Vardaman I had a nightmare.
3. After they passed I taken the mule out and looped up the trace chains and followed.
Omer Ersin
1.So he stopped there like he know her, before that little house was destroyed.
2. And now they deny me.
subject-verb agreement
Tianzhi Xu (Tansy)
1. “Sometimes I lose faith in human nature for a time; I am assailed by doubt."
2, One day I was talking to Cora.
3. It surged up out of the water and stood for an instant upright upon that surging and heaving desolation like Christ.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. The stores are dark, but the lights pass on the windows when we pass.
2. In the window are two big glasses of soda water, red and green.
Ipek Turan
1. Someone comes through the hall.
2. Cash and I sit in the wagon; Jewel sits the horse at the off rear wheel.
3. Neither water nor earth swirls.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. We turn into Tull's lane.
2. Jewel looks at him, then his face turns in in that quiet.
3. He and I look at one another with long probing looks.
Campbell Lin
1. It looks no different from a hundred other wagons there. ("looks" agrees with "it")
2. The music was not playing now. ("was" agrees with "music")
3. Dewey Dell comes out. ("comes" agrees with "Dewey Dell")
Hamilton Chen
1. I get that the real supermen are those who turn their other cheeks, who rebuke through silence or a shift in posture or expression.
2. The danger here isn't with people being rich or people dreaming about being rich.
1. “Sometimes I lose faith in human nature for a time; I am assailed by doubt."
2, One day I was talking to Cora.
3. It surged up out of the water and stood for an instant upright upon that surging and heaving desolation like Christ.
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. The stores are dark, but the lights pass on the windows when we pass.
2. In the window are two big glasses of soda water, red and green.
Ipek Turan
1. Someone comes through the hall.
2. Cash and I sit in the wagon; Jewel sits the horse at the off rear wheel.
3. Neither water nor earth swirls.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. We turn into Tull's lane.
2. Jewel looks at him, then his face turns in in that quiet.
3. He and I look at one another with long probing looks.
Campbell Lin
1. It looks no different from a hundred other wagons there. ("looks" agrees with "it")
2. The music was not playing now. ("was" agrees with "music")
3. Dewey Dell comes out. ("comes" agrees with "Dewey Dell")
Hamilton Chen
1. I get that the real supermen are those who turn their other cheeks, who rebuke through silence or a shift in posture or expression.
2. The danger here isn't with people being rich or people dreaming about being rich.
singular + plural nouns
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. There were too many unanswered questions, confusing arguments and mixed messages for a young child to comprehend and reason with.
2. It fought courageously against a tremendous social and financial transformation and paid an enormous price.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. There is a store located just as you come out of the Natahala.
2. Contradictions were everywhere.
3. We were a region riven with extremes and the bearers of a cultural isolation that sometimes pronounced itself with self-righteous pride and a willful rebelliousness.
Omer Ersin
1.You never had them cakes.
2.It"s just a loan.
1. There were too many unanswered questions, confusing arguments and mixed messages for a young child to comprehend and reason with.
2. It fought courageously against a tremendous social and financial transformation and paid an enormous price.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. There is a store located just as you come out of the Natahala.
2. Contradictions were everywhere.
3. We were a region riven with extremes and the bearers of a cultural isolation that sometimes pronounced itself with self-righteous pride and a willful rebelliousness.
Omer Ersin
1.You never had them cakes.
2.It"s just a loan.
articles
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. A couple of months ago, my friend Chuck called and asked me to write this piece for his new site, The Bitter Southerner.
2. “Garden & Gun is the first magazine in a long time to realize that the South is about more than sweet tea and pecan pie”.
3. In an interview in its first issue, the Alabama super-chef Frank Stitt came close to inadvertently defending some of what transpires in G&G.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. She and I talked about substance abuse and finding a program.
2. I don't think I've seen it yet operating as an actual model.
3. The owner was looking for a buyer.
Omer Ersin
1. 'When he saw the money...'
2.'It's a lie. It was them Sunday clothes you had in that package.'
1. A couple of months ago, my friend Chuck called and asked me to write this piece for his new site, The Bitter Southerner.
2. “Garden & Gun is the first magazine in a long time to realize that the South is about more than sweet tea and pecan pie”.
3. In an interview in its first issue, the Alabama super-chef Frank Stitt came close to inadvertently defending some of what transpires in G&G.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. She and I talked about substance abuse and finding a program.
2. I don't think I've seen it yet operating as an actual model.
3. The owner was looking for a buyer.
Omer Ersin
1. 'When he saw the money...'
2.'It's a lie. It was them Sunday clothes you had in that package.'
prepositions
Yuhao (Marcus) Chen
1. I came home with nice sun and wind burns.
2. My assistant was crazy in love with boiled peanuts.
3. I met this woman in downtown Nashville on Veteran's day 2012.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Garden&Gun looks like the South as directed by Robert Redford.
2. It comes to their conception of the writing game.
3. There is one more subject that seems just as off-limits in the page of Garden&Gun.
Omer Ersin
1.'... if he aint halfway to Texas by now...'
2.They had to clean around by Mottson, and then the oone with the cement came back and told him to shut up.
1. I came home with nice sun and wind burns.
2. My assistant was crazy in love with boiled peanuts.
3. I met this woman in downtown Nashville on Veteran's day 2012.
Tianyi (Robin) Song
1. Garden&Gun looks like the South as directed by Robert Redford.
2. It comes to their conception of the writing game.
3. There is one more subject that seems just as off-limits in the page of Garden&Gun.
Omer Ersin
1.'... if he aint halfway to Texas by now...'
2.They had to clean around by Mottson, and then the oone with the cement came back and told him to shut up.