A. Tennyson
B. Charles Lamb
C. Lockhart
D. None of These
John Gibson Lockhart, a Scottish writer and critic, was one of the contributors to Blackwood’s Magazine who derided William Hazlitt and other writers, including Leigh Hunt and John Keats, as members of the so-called “Cockney School of Poetry.” This term was used pejoratively to criticize their perceived lack of sophistication and their association with London’s middle-class literary circles.
A. Talking too much
B. Talking out of turn
C. Talking without making any sense
D. Talking rapidly and without stopping.
A. The doctor asked the patient how he is feeling now and if the pain has gone down.
B. The doctor asked the patient how he had felt then when the pain was gone.
C. The doctor asked the patient how he felt then and if the pain had gone down.
D. The doctor asked the patient how he was feeling then and if the pain was down.
A. Homophone
B. Egocron
C. Oxymoron
D. Homonym
A. Have
B. Did
C. Has
D. Had
A. expressive
B. eloquent
C. expressive
D. calm
A. Shelley
B. Lord Byron
C. Wordsworth
D. Keats
A. Tennyson
B. Charles Lamb
C. Lockhart
D. None of These