Saturday, March 21, 2020
The English Civil War
The English Civil War The outbreak of the English Civil War in England between Charles I and Parliament changed its form of government dramatically. It was only a violent episode in the continuing revolution that was already occurring. The Civil War broke out because the two forms of government, the king and Parliament, could not be reconciled. It was a struggle between the bourgeois or the middle-class people and the aristocrats or gentry. It all started from disputes starting with the first Stuart, James I, who took over the monarch of England after the death of the last Tudor, Elizabeth, and led on with more disputes with James I's son, Charles I and Parliament. Many other people contributed to the start of the Civil War. As a result to Charles and Parliament's incapability to collaborate on each other's terms, the English Civil War had now started, in 1642. The war lasted for seven years and finally ended in 1649.King Charles II is portrayed wearing the robes of ...Great leaders have taken charge befo re, during, and after the Civil War and finally when it had ended; England had just experienced one of its biggest impacts in its history.The English Civil War broke out caused by many different reasons. Conflicts between James I and Charles I against Parliament had lead to the Civil War. One of the reasons that brought forth the Civil War was the Divine Right of Kings that James I introduced to Parliament, claming that the monarchs were chosen by God to rule on earth, therefore they should receive absolute power. To Parliament, this meant that they would have no space in order or making any decisions, with no power. The real conflict and dispute came from James I's son, Charles I and Parliament. Parliament had once approached Charles with the Nineteen Propositions' which were to end their disputes but...
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
5 Not This . . . But That Parallelism Problems
5 Not This . . . But That Parallelism Problems 5 ââ¬Å"Not This . . . But Thatâ⬠Parallelism Problems 5 ââ¬Å"Not This . . . But Thatâ⬠Parallelism Problems By Mark Nichol Just as ââ¬Å"not only . . . but alsoâ⬠constructions often stymie writers (see this recent post on the topic, and search the Daily Writing Tips site for ââ¬Å"not only . . . but alsoâ⬠to find several others), similar syntactical phrasing can be difficult to form correctly. 1. ââ¬Å"The movie achieves its effects, not by threatening to show you something hideous, but by getting under your skin and into your head.â⬠This sentence constructs the comparative phrases (ââ¬Å"not by [this] but by [that]â⬠) correctly, but the internal punctuation is superfluous: ââ¬Å"The movie achieves its effects not by threatening to show you something hideous but by getting under your skin and into your head.â⬠2. ââ¬Å"I caution her not to rely so heavily on what she thinks others would do, but on her own intuition.â⬠Because the verb rely applies to both comparative phrases, as achieves does in the first example, both the phrase beginning with not and the one beginning with but should follow the verb; the phrase describing the recommended strategy should also be revised to more thoroughly parallel the description of the personââ¬â¢s original approach: ââ¬Å"I caution her to rely not so heavily on what she thinks others would do but to depend, rather, on her intuition.â⬠3. ââ¬Å"He films it in a way that doesnââ¬â¢t suggest good taste, but colossal presumption and delusion.â⬠This sentence has the same error of parallelism as the preceding one; the verb suggest should precede both the not phrase (here, its beginning is disguised as doesnââ¬â¢t) and the but phrase: ââ¬Å"He films it in a way that suggests not good taste but colossal presumption and delusion.â⬠4. ââ¬Å"But the story here is not one of privacy infringement so much as the way real estate is changing because of technology.â⬠The comparative phrasing here is incomplete; a repetition of is within a mirroring verb phrase must be inserted before the concluding phrase: ââ¬Å"But the story here is not one of privacy infringement so much as it is the way real estate is changing because of technology.â⬠5. ââ¬Å"They accomplished this task both by utilizing the built-in transformation tools and creating their own.â⬠Both is correctly positioned only if by is repeated before the verb in the second part of the compound phrase: ââ¬Å"They accomplished this task both by utilizing the built-in transformation tools and by creating their own.â⬠Otherwise, both should switch places with by: ââ¬Å"They accomplished this task by both utilizing the built-in transformation tools and creating their own.â⬠Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Style category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:50 Rhetorical Devices for Rational WritingThat vs. WhichList of 50 Compliments and Nice Things to Say!
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