Anasayfa Arama sonuçları
Sonucu Daralt
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Toplam 788 kayıt bulunmuştur Gösterilen 80-100 / Aktif Sayfa : 5
(Hikayemizin sonunda boşluk doldurmalı konu tarama soruları ile sözlük ilavesi vardır. ) "A Tale of Two Cities" is a book which contains the simplified edition of the novel with the same title by famous author Charles Dickens. The two cities—Paris and London—were at the dawn of a revolution whose influences were felt all over the world throughout the centuries: The French Revolution. Among the great happenings which would be remembered throughout the history, the micro world of a family, the complicated eve
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(Hikayemizin sonunda boşluk doldurmalı konu tarama soruları ile sözlük ilavesi vardır. ) "Sense and Sensibility" is a novel by famous English author Jane Austen. The lives of Marianne, who judges with her heart, and Elinor, who judges with her reason, are narrated with the ironic language and style of Jane Austen. This is a life in a class, where everything is made up of money, parties, dances and most importantly gossip. A delightful story that will provide a nice and funny time for the reader. Dorlion Rea
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My Fellow Traveler is a novella by famous author Maxim Gorky. This book contains a simplifed and edited version of it. Maxim meets a stranger in the harbour of the city of Odessa. After he listens to the stranger's sad story, he decides to help him and sets on a long journey in which he gets through many interesting and dangerous adventures. Dorlion Readers (Stage 1) Dorlion Readers is a series of retold and simplified stories which are classifed into 4 stages, each stage consists of 10 story books, in a
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"The Story of Sinbad the Sailor" is one of the most famous stories from Arabian Nights. This book contains a simplified version of it. The Sailor Sinbad, who wants to earn a lot of money and become a rich man, sets on many journeys. He lands on very different kingdoms and exotic islands. During his seven voyages, he gets through many dangerous adventures and finds the meaning of life at the end. Dorlion Readers (Stage 1) Dorlion Readers is a series of retold and simplified stories which are classifed int
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As the title may suggest, this book contains nine retold and edited stories of the Brothers Grimm. Each one of these world-wide known tales will lead you into the magical atmosphere of the dream world of the Grimm Brothers and make you think about some important issues such as; love, hatred, revenge and jeolusy... Dorlion Readers (Stage 1) Dorlion Readers is a series of retold and simplified stories which are classifed into 4 stages, each stage consists of 10 story books, in accordance with their degrees
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The Nebula Coating
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"Shakespeare illustrates art's ethical functionality, but he also clarifies the dif-ference between art and religion. The final scene takes place within a context that is metatheatrical and overtly artificial. Paulina emphasizes the point for us: "That she is living / Were it but told you, should be hooted at / Like an old tale" Peter Goldman
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What Men Live By First Love Amok Letter From Unknown Woman The Royal Game Metamorphosis The Art of War The Murders in the Rue Morgue The Diary of a Madman The Time Machine
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Our author Lecturer Hande İSAOĞLU examined Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "The Scarlet Letter" and Herman Melville's "Moby Dick" in the light of Freudian psychoanalytic theory. During her analysis of the characters from a Freudian perspective, he also benefited from Lacanian psychoanalytic theory and Jacques Derrida's deconstruction theory. Psychoanalytic observations of the characters will allow readers to perceive the inner world of the characters and how their suppressed desires are revealed through their
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"I will gladly tell you the history of my spectacles," began Titbottom. "It is very simple; and I am not at all sure that a great many other people have not a pair of the same kind. I have never, indeed, heard of them by the gross, like those of our young friend, Moses, the son of the Vicar of Wakefield. In fact, I think a gross would be quite enough to supply the world. It is a kind of article for which the demand does not increase with use. If we should all wear spectacles like mine, we should never smile
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"On one occasion Wolf Tusk and his band swooped down on a settlement where they knew that all the defenders were away, and no one but women and chil-dren were left to meet them. Here one of the most atro-cious massacres of the West took place. Every woman and child in the settlement was killed under circumstanc-es of inconceivable brutality. The buildings, such as they were, were burnt down, and, when the men returned, they found nothing but heaps of smouldering ruin.
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For some reason, which the maid either did not know or would not disclose, the Signorina was exiled for a time from Venice. She belonged to a good family there, but the name of the family the maid also refused to divulge. She dared not tell it, she said. They had been in Florence for several weeks, but had only taken the rooms below within the last two days. The Signorina received absolutely no one, and the maid had been cautioned to say nothing whatever about her to any person; but she had apparently succu
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"I am ready," said the coat, "to tell all I know of myself, and I shall not keep you long, I trust. My friend the baize gown and I had the same origin on the back of a sheep, only I was of a nicer texture, and had, from my earliest days, a more refined character; and, of course, was used for higher purposes. Major Sword there may know per-haps that I had as much to do with making the major of Cadets as he had, only I did not make people run when they looked at me, as he says he did.
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"Excellent, excellent, my worthy warrior! I should dearly love to have captain of mine pay such an informal visit to his estimable Countship. We shall build the fortress you suggest, and call it Baldwineltz. You shall be its com-mander, and I now bestow upon you Schloss Eltz, the only proviso being that you are to enter into possession of it by whatever means you choose to use."
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Mrs. Farrell continued the debate. She talked in a busi-nesslike manner and pronounced the arrangement one by which both sides would benefit. There were thou-sands of other Farrells, she pointed out, any one of whom they might have adopted. But they had selected me because in so choosing, they thought they were taking the least risk. They had decided she was pleased to say, that I would not disgrace them, and that as a "literary author " I brought with me a certain social asset.
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"I hain't afeerd," he kept saying to himself. "I hain't afeerd o' nothin' nor no-body; but he lay brooding until his head throbbed, until darkness filled the narrow gorge, and the strip of dark blue up through the trees was pointed with faint stars. He was troubled when he rose, and climbed on Rome's horse and rode homeward -so troubled that he turned finally and started back in a gallop for Hazlan.
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The Prince hesitated for a moment as he concluded the sentence, and seemed about to add something more, but apparently he remembered that a report of the trial was to go before the King, whose representative was present, and he was particularly desirous that nothing should go on the records which savoured of old-time malignity; for it was well known that his Majesty had a particular aversion to the ancient forms of torture that had obtained heretofore in his kingdom. Recollecting this, the Prince sat down.
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Dot was fat, resolute, hasty, and devotedly unselfish. When Sam scalped her new doll, and fastened the glossy black curls to a wigwam improvised with the curtains of the four-post bed in the best bedroom, Dot was sorely tried. As her eyes passed from the crown-less doll on the floor to the floss- silk ringlets hanging from the bed-furni-ture, her round rosy face grew rounder and rosier, and tears burst from her eyes. But in a moment more she clenched her little fists, forced back the tears, and gave vent to
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To the police, the detective assured them, Ida Earle had been known for years. When she was young, she had been under the protection of a man high in the ranks of Tammany, and, in consequence, with her different ven-tures the Police had never interfered. She now was pro-prietress of the roadhouse in the note described as Kessler's Cafe. It was a place for joy-riders. There was a cabaret, a hall for public dancing, and rooms for very private suppers.
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"I hope you don't mind if I stay," Arnold said, moving some loose stones to make her seat more comfortable. "You have the prior right to-day, but this is an old haunt of mine. I feel as if I were doing the honors; and to tell you the truth, I am rather used up. The new workings are very hot and the drifts are low. It's a combination of steam-bath and hoeing corn."
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Sadece stokta olanlar : 
Toplam 788 kayıt bulunmuştur Gösterilen 80-100 / Aktif Sayfa : 5