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English Literature Helpers
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This channel is created to help English Literature students. You may download pdfs file of those videos which you have watched from our YouTube channel. https://youtube.com/c/EnglishLiteratureHelpers
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It is really a helpful video

Must watch and share frnds

https://youtu.be/Wtii2ew-xRU

✍️The blood and thunder elements ment were introduced into English Drama
Thomas Kyd

✍️Shakespeare addressed his sonnets to a handsome young man called -
W.H. as well as to a Dark Lady.


✍️Tamburlaine the Great was first produced in -
1587-88.

The White Devil is based on the life of the celebrated Italian courtesan -
Vittoria.

✍️Who wrote Lyrical Ballads? - Wordsworth and Coleridge.

✍️The paths of glory lead but to the grave, in which poem do you find this line?
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.

✍️Who wrote a poem on the death of Chaucer? -
Occleve in The Governail of Princes.


✍️Milton wrote Areopagittica -
to defend people's Freedom of Speech.

✍️Murder in the Cathedral deals with the martyrdom of -
Archbishop Thomas Becket.

✍️Who used the phrase still-vexed Bermoothes for the immortal pages of Hakluyt?

William Shakespeare.

✍️Between 1590 and 1593 the theatres were closed owing to - disturbances caused by the actors.

✍️The Play by Galsworthy that dramatizes Labour-Capital problem is -
Strife.

✍️Name the famous anthology published in 1557? -
Song and Sonnets or Tottel's Miscellany.

✍️Who was the first English poet to choose a German subject? - Alexander Barclay.

✍️Who called Milton the poetical son of Spenser? -
John Dryden.

✍️The Oxford Movement was basically a -
Religious Movement.

✍️The Revenge Tragedy and The Atheists Tragedy both the masterpieces of Cyril Tourneur are set in - Italy.

WHEN TO USE *ON*

Days of the week:

* on Monday
* on Tuesday
* on Wednesday
* on Thursday
* on Friday
* on Saturday
* on Sunday

Dates:

* on January 1st
* on March 8th
* on December 25th

Holidays:

* on Christmas
* on Thanksgiving
* on Easter

Surfaces:

* on the table
* on the floor
* on the ceiling
* on the wall

Objects:

* on the car
* on the bike
* on the phone
* on the computer

Additional examples

* on the weekend
* on vacation
* on the radio
* on TV
* on the internet


Prepositions with NOUNS

on:
on the table
on a journey
on the wall

in:
in a box
in the park
in the morning

at:
at the office
at the party
at the beach

by:
by the river
by my side
by car

to:
to the store
to a concert
to the beach

for:
for a cause
for dinner
for my birthday

with:
with a friend
with a pen
with joy

from:
from the airport
from a book
from the past

about:
about the topic
about a person
about the movie

over:
over the hill
over a bridge
over the limit


Fun Advanced English Vocabulary

Eye-catching
Extremely attractive or visually appealing

Heart-wrenching
Extremely sad or emotionally distressing

Mind-blowing
Extremely impressive or astonishing

Headstrong
Stubborn or determined

Nosey
Intrusive or excessively curious about others' affairs

Handmade
Created or crafted by hand, often indicating a higher level of quality or uniqueness

Footloose
Carefree or unattached, particularly in terms of personal or romantic relationships


Advanced English sentences

I'm tired - I'm exhausted
I'm hungry - I'm ravenous
I'm happy - I'm ecstatic
I don't know - I'm clueless
I'm a bit sick - I'm under the weather
I'll help you - I've got your back
Think carefully - Ponder meticulously
Do it yourself - Take the reins
Move quickly - Act swiftly
Don't disturb - Let sleeping dogs lie
She's very smart - She's a genius
I made a mistake - I committed a faux pas
Calm down - Keep a level head


Advanced idioms in English

1. It's raining cats and dogs - It's raining heavily.
Synonym: It's pouring

2. Break a leg - good luck (typically said to performers before a show)
Synonym: Knock 'em dead

3. The ball is in your court - It's your turn to take action or make a decision.
Synonym: The onus is on you

4. Hit the nail on the head - Accurately or precisely describe something
Synonym: Hit the mark

5. Steal someone's thunder - Take attention or credit away from someone.
Synonym: Upstage

Advanced vs Basic English words
1. Elaborate = explain in detail
2. Mitigate = reduce
3. Alleviate = ease
4. Aggravate = worsen
5. Elicit = draw out
6. Engender = create
7. Exacerbate = make worse
8. Facilitate = make easier
9. Implement = put into effect
10. Anticipate = expect
11. Persevere = continue despite difficulty
12. Repudiate = reject
13. Retract = take back
14. Scrutinize = examine closely
15. Terminate = end
16. Validate = confirm
17. Exemplify = illustrate
18. Encompass = include

[ English vs. Advanced English

1. Begin 🚀 - Initiate
2. Cease 🛑 - Terminate
3. Purchase 💸 - Acquire
4. Aid 🤝 - Support
5. Speak 🗣️ - Communicate
6. Completion 🎯 - Conclude
7. Notion 💡 - Concept
8. Obstacle ⚙️ - Challenge
9. Provide 🎁 - Supply
10. Attain 🏆 - Obtain
11. Scheme 📅 - Strategize
12. Chatty 💬 - Communicative
13. Notify 🗨️ - Inform
14. Finalize 🏁 - Complete

Matthew Arnold (1882-1888) composed Memorial Verses' in April 1850. In this poem he has paid tribute to – Goethe, Byron and Wordsworth. First stanza of this poem makes it clear–
Goethe in weimer sleeps, and Greece,
Long since, saw Byron's struggle cease,
But one such death remained to come;
The Last poetic voice is dumb
We stand today by Wordsworth's tomb.

https://youtu.be/znVUulXzTAg

https://youtu.be/ZJSQBdYVdcI

https://youtu.be/pDku63zi734

FIGURE OF SPEECH:



1. Simile:
- Explanation: A simile is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things using "like" or "as."
- Example: "Her eyes sparkled like diamonds."

2. Metaphor:
- Explanation: A metaphor is a figure of speech that directly refers to one thing by mentioning another for rhetorical effect.
- Example: "Time is a thief."

3. Personification:
- Explanation: Personification is a figure of speech in which human qualities are attributed to non-human things.
- Example: "The trees danced in the wind."

4. Hyperbole:
- Explanation: Hyperbole is a figure of speech that involves exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
- Example: "I've told you a million times."

5. Alliteration:
- Explanation: Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words.
- Example: "Sally sells seashells by the seashore."

6. Onomatopoeia:
- Explanation: Onomatopoeia is the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named.
- Example: "Buzz," "crash," "bang."

7. Oxymoron:
- Explanation: An oxymoron is a figure of speech in which contradictory terms appear in conjunction.
- Example: "Deafening silence," "jumbo shrimp."

8. Irony:
- Explanation: Irony is a figure of speech in which the intended meaning of words is opposite to their literal meaning.
- Example: "The fire station burned down."

9. Metonymy:
- Explanation: Metonymy is a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is replaced with another that is closely related to it.
- Example: Referring to the monarch as "the crown."

10. Synecdoche:
- Explanation: Synecdoche is a figure of speech in which a part is made to represent the whole or vice versa.
- Example: Referring to a car as "wheels."

11. Litotes:
- Explanation: Litotes is a figure of speech that uses double negatives or understatement to emphasize a point.
- Example: "It's not uncommon," meaning "It's common."

12. Euphemism:
- Explanation: Euphemism is a figure of speech that replaces a harsh or unpleasant term with a more mild or indirect one.
- Example: "Passed away" instead of "died."

These are just a few examples of figures of speech commonly used in language and literature.