Writing e mails in english revised-ver01 part07 summingupfirstdaySuzuki Shigeo
The document summarizes key points from the first day of a seminar or class. It discusses dichotomies between subjective and objective, past and present, and singular and plural. It also covers pronunciation of certain letters in English and the differences between emails and presentations. Sample email and letter formats are provided with an example letter discussing weekends, hobbies, and family. Proper formatting of paragraphs in emails and letters is emphasized.
Writing e mails in english revised part08 ifSuzuki Shigeo
The document discusses using "if" statements to talk about hypothetical or imagined situations that differ from facts or the present. It provides examples of using "if" to discuss objective and subjective situations, as well as examples comparing the present factual form versus the conjectural non-past form. A variety of situations are presented to illustrate using "if" to discuss what would happen or would have happened under different circumstances compared to reality.
Writing e mails in english revised-ver01 part07 summingupfirstdaySuzuki Shigeo
The document summarizes key points from the first day of a seminar or class. It discusses dichotomies between subjective and objective, past and present, and singular and plural. It also covers pronunciation of certain letters in English and the differences between emails and presentations. Sample email and letter formats are provided with an example letter discussing weekends, hobbies, and family. Proper formatting of paragraphs in emails and letters is emphasized.
Writing e mails in english revised part08 ifSuzuki Shigeo
The document discusses using "if" statements to talk about hypothetical or imagined situations that differ from facts or the present. It provides examples of using "if" to discuss objective and subjective situations, as well as examples comparing the present factual form versus the conjectural non-past form. A variety of situations are presented to illustrate using "if" to discuss what would happen or would have happened under different circumstances compared to reality.
Writing e mails in english revised part07 present-perfect pastSuzuki Shigeo
This document discusses the relationship between past and present through the lens of time. It explains how using different verb tenses, like the past tense versus present perfect tense, can either connect events in the past to the present or create a disconnect between past and present. Specifically, it examines how using the present perfect tense maintains a link between past events, like surgeries, and their current effects or influence, while the past tense separates past events from the present.
Writing e mails in english revised part06 present participleSuzuki Shigeo
1. The document discusses the present continuous tense in English and the use of "-ing" forms to indicate ongoing or unfinished actions.
2. It provides examples of sentences using the present continuous tense and explains how it differs from the simple present tense in emphasizing an action that is happening now or for a period of time.
3. The document also contains exercises asking the reader to identify examples using the present continuous tense correctly and practice forming sentences using "-ing" to describe ongoing actions.
Writing e mails in english revised part02 catching emotionsSuzuki Shigeo
The document discusses how to engage the interest of a recipient in an email introduction by moving from providing basic information about oneself to incorporating elements that can surprise or intrigue the reader. It suggests including details that create associations, spark interest in shared hobbies or experiences, and ultimately reveal something unexpected or unique about oneself. An example introduction is provided that initially shares the sender's name and its meaning, mentions a related interest, and concludes by mentioning caring for a son with disabilities.
Writing e mails in english revised part03 invitationSuzuki Shigeo
The document provides tips for writing emails in Japanese. It discusses including information that surprises the recipient in a positive way by mentioning one's weaknesses or uniqueness. It also advises being helpful to others by providing information that is useful to them. The document demonstrates these tips through an example email introduction between two people, Geo and Maru. Geo shares personal details about himself and offers to answer questions, following the guidelines of surprising the recipient while also being helpful.
Love and marriage in English literature Part07 Austine Pride and prejudiceSuzuki Shigeo
The personal anxiety of choosing an appropriate marriage partner usually concerns with differences in classes and wealth, but the heroine in this Austen’s novel put a top priority on differences or compatibility of personal characters.
Love and marriage in english literature Part07 Keats la belle dame01Suzuki Shigeo
John Keats marvelous depicted an enigmatic power of women to seduce and possess the whole spirit of a man in his “La Belle Dame Sans Merci" (1884). This type of women is called magna mater or femme fatale.
Love and marriage in english literaute part06 shakespeare merchant of veniceSuzuki Shigeo
Portia in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice changed her character after she married Bassanio, a noble Venetian merchant who believes in friendship. She works as a capacity of truly faithful helpmate to her husband to play a role of go-between the two different world, Gemainschaft and Gesellschaft.
Love and marriage in english literature Part05 wuthering heightsSuzuki Shigeo
Emily Bronte first succeeded in congealing passion for love with an elemental force in Heathcliff, the main character in her novel, Wuthering Heights (1847). Against the backdrop of the passive gentility of the ordinary people, we encounter three different levels of love: physical, spiritual, and peaks of passion.
Love and marriage in english literature Part04 Romeo and Juliet theologyof_lo...Suzuki Shigeo
Shakespeare delineated in Romeo and Juliet a new type of love which surpasses a traditional dichotomy of love: the one, legitimate, sacramental, natural, and in harmony with cosmic law; the other, illegitimate, perverted, selfish, and sinful.
Love and marriage in english literature part03 eros and agapeSuzuki Shigeo
John Milton described an ideal marriage couple, Adam and Eve, in his Paradise Lost, inspiring us to recognize a couple who shares deep trust in God and his Grace, can embrace mutual true love. He eventually endorses a Christian belief in superiority of agape to eros.
Love and marriage in english literature part02 marriageSuzuki Shigeo
John Milton wrote four divorce tracts in the early 1640', claiming a couple who found themselves incompatible in nature after marriage can be divorced. The author also described an ideal marriage couple in his Paradise Lost twenty years later, inspiring us to recognize a couple knotted in true love can make a great sacrifice to each other.
Love and marriage in english literature part01 introduction 03Suzuki Shigeo
Comparing sincere pure love lost in Murkami's Norwegian wood with fake love created in Flynn's Gone girl, we will discuss how love forces us to transform our personality from childhood to adulthood.
Writing e mails in english revised part07 present-perfect pastSuzuki Shigeo
This document discusses the relationship between past and present through the lens of time. It explains how using different verb tenses, like the past tense versus present perfect tense, can either connect events in the past to the present or create a disconnect between past and present. Specifically, it examines how using the present perfect tense maintains a link between past events, like surgeries, and their current effects or influence, while the past tense separates past events from the present.
Writing e mails in english revised part06 present participleSuzuki Shigeo
1. The document discusses the present continuous tense in English and the use of "-ing" forms to indicate ongoing or unfinished actions.
2. It provides examples of sentences using the present continuous tense and explains how it differs from the simple present tense in emphasizing an action that is happening now or for a period of time.
3. The document also contains exercises asking the reader to identify examples using the present continuous tense correctly and practice forming sentences using "-ing" to describe ongoing actions.
Writing e mails in english revised part02 catching emotionsSuzuki Shigeo
The document discusses how to engage the interest of a recipient in an email introduction by moving from providing basic information about oneself to incorporating elements that can surprise or intrigue the reader. It suggests including details that create associations, spark interest in shared hobbies or experiences, and ultimately reveal something unexpected or unique about oneself. An example introduction is provided that initially shares the sender's name and its meaning, mentions a related interest, and concludes by mentioning caring for a son with disabilities.
Writing e mails in english revised part03 invitationSuzuki Shigeo
The document provides tips for writing emails in Japanese. It discusses including information that surprises the recipient in a positive way by mentioning one's weaknesses or uniqueness. It also advises being helpful to others by providing information that is useful to them. The document demonstrates these tips through an example email introduction between two people, Geo and Maru. Geo shares personal details about himself and offers to answer questions, following the guidelines of surprising the recipient while also being helpful.
Love and marriage in English literature Part07 Austine Pride and prejudiceSuzuki Shigeo
The personal anxiety of choosing an appropriate marriage partner usually concerns with differences in classes and wealth, but the heroine in this Austen’s novel put a top priority on differences or compatibility of personal characters.
Love and marriage in english literature Part07 Keats la belle dame01Suzuki Shigeo
John Keats marvelous depicted an enigmatic power of women to seduce and possess the whole spirit of a man in his “La Belle Dame Sans Merci" (1884). This type of women is called magna mater or femme fatale.
Love and marriage in english literaute part06 shakespeare merchant of veniceSuzuki Shigeo
Portia in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice changed her character after she married Bassanio, a noble Venetian merchant who believes in friendship. She works as a capacity of truly faithful helpmate to her husband to play a role of go-between the two different world, Gemainschaft and Gesellschaft.
Love and marriage in english literature Part05 wuthering heightsSuzuki Shigeo
Emily Bronte first succeeded in congealing passion for love with an elemental force in Heathcliff, the main character in her novel, Wuthering Heights (1847). Against the backdrop of the passive gentility of the ordinary people, we encounter three different levels of love: physical, spiritual, and peaks of passion.
Love and marriage in english literature Part04 Romeo and Juliet theologyof_lo...Suzuki Shigeo
Shakespeare delineated in Romeo and Juliet a new type of love which surpasses a traditional dichotomy of love: the one, legitimate, sacramental, natural, and in harmony with cosmic law; the other, illegitimate, perverted, selfish, and sinful.
Love and marriage in english literature part03 eros and agapeSuzuki Shigeo
John Milton described an ideal marriage couple, Adam and Eve, in his Paradise Lost, inspiring us to recognize a couple who shares deep trust in God and his Grace, can embrace mutual true love. He eventually endorses a Christian belief in superiority of agape to eros.
Love and marriage in english literature part02 marriageSuzuki Shigeo
John Milton wrote four divorce tracts in the early 1640', claiming a couple who found themselves incompatible in nature after marriage can be divorced. The author also described an ideal marriage couple in his Paradise Lost twenty years later, inspiring us to recognize a couple knotted in true love can make a great sacrifice to each other.
Love and marriage in english literature part01 introduction 03Suzuki Shigeo
Comparing sincere pure love lost in Murkami's Norwegian wood with fake love created in Flynn's Gone girl, we will discuss how love forces us to transform our personality from childhood to adulthood.
Daughter of viceroy of Naples Don Pedro di Toledo, Eleonora married Cosimo I de' Medici in 1539 and died in 1562.
He was the illegitimate son of a merchant, from Pistoia, Bartholomew the Elder, the owner of the main commercial Florentine company that was operating in France, in Lyon, a city of thriving commercial and cultural initiatives, because at the crossroads with Switzerland, Italy and Germany.
The father had financed the military exploits of Louis XII, which led to the temporary conquest of the Duchy of Milan, and the young Bartholomew welcomed as a page at the court of Francis I, was formed culturally much in Lyon than in Padua, where he attended the Studio 1529-1531, neglecting the commercial interests of the company, when his father died, he left to the care of relatives.
He was a friend of Jean de Vauzelles, abbot of Menthon, who was appointed by Margaret of Angoulême, Queen of Navarre and his patron, master of supplications; the de Vauzelles joined the spiritual movement of the French return to the Gospel, promoted in France by the bishop of Meaux, Guillaume Briçonnet, Lefrèvre by Jacques d'Etaples and Louis de Berquin, and translated religious works of Pietro Aretino, the Humanity of Christ and the Passion of Christ, whose first copies were sent to Venice in 1539 by the Italian writer Panciatichi.
In 1534 he married Lucrezia Panciatichi Pucci in 1539 and settled in Florence, where 20 January 1541 he became a member of the Academy of the Humid; January 31 was chosen among the reformers of its Statutes and in 1545 the Duke of Florence, Cosimo I de 'Medici appointed him consul in 1549, sending him to France to renew its relationship with the French monarchy governed then by Henry II and Catherine de' Medici.
Here Bartolomeo became interested in the Protestant Reformation, leading to Florence, in intellectual circles that were owned by Benedict Varchi, Pier Francesco Riccio and Marcantonio Flaminio, banned books by the Roman Church, as the Institution de la religion chrétienne Calvin.
Lucrezia di Gismondo Pucci married in 1528 Bartolomeo Panciatichi, whose portrait was probably painted in pendant with this one about 1540. Bronzino describes her beautiful dress, enhancing her aristocratic dignity and her elegance: the long gold necklace the lady wears includes small plates where are legible the words "Sans fin amour dure", alluding to love and faithfulness.
She has her hand on a book of daily offices, turned to prayers to the Virgin Mary, and the words on her outer gold necklace say Amour Dure Sans Fin (love lasts eternally).
This copy of the Canzoniere begins with a stylized portrait of Petrarch at his writing table. The manuscript is written in minuscola cancelleresca, a script similar to one that Petrarch adopted in early rough drafts of his poetry, some of which survive in the Vatican Library’s Codex Vaticanus latinus 3196. The minuscola cancelleresca was in wide use during the 14th century, and it has been suggested therefore that this manuscript may have been copied in the 1390s. Whether written in the 14th or early-15th century, Marston MS 99 is one of the earliest copies of the Canzoniere. It appears together with Petrarch's Triumphi, and a collection of Italian poetry by various authors. Petrarch remains the dominate figure in the manuscript, just as he was in the literary circles of both the 14th and 15th centuries.
This is not the only level on which the open book acts as an attribute, for Laura Battiferri was an eloquent poet in her own right, well known not just in Florentine literary circles, but also in other cultural centres in Italy and abroad.42 She therefore holds up the hallowed model of her own poetic out- put. Her special position as both subject and object in terms of the Petrarchan lyric found expression in sonnets sent to her. For Cellini, for example, in a sonnet she included in the published volume of her poems, both Laura and Petrarch were united in her person: Lassui v'alzo ii Petrarca, e dietro poi ne venne a rivedervi in paradiso; sete scesi in un corpo ora ambidoi