a someone of the other days
Eh? A. Someone of the three, someone
of the three ₁ where such a palm tree exists ₂
floats a photograph,
a someone of once cared ₃
a someone of the other days, to whom ₄
A. Someone of the times he was down there ₅
A. Someone of the “red-hots” in St. Louis ₆ or
a someone of that kind; and he ₇
used to run code messages for bright readers;
what a scoop. ₈ The root refers to a ‘someone of,’
the stem to ‘someone so
mixed’ ₂ but a ‘someone’;
of that he was unreasonably sure. ₉
It was a losing proposition and I wanted to get rid of it. ₅
If anything is needed at the Last Judgment, it is ventilation. ₁₀
sources
- Samuel Schreiber v Munson Steamship Line, N.Y. Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Case on Appeal (1926) : 343 / more
- Rosa Vallejos, A Grammar of Kukama-Kukamiria : A Language from the Amazon (2016) : 138 / more
- Sean Michael McCarthy, “Fallen Soldier,” in Your Life of Poems (2017) / more
- Philip Verrill Mighels, Thurley Ruxton (1911) : 303 / more
- State of Michigan Supreme Court, Appeal, Wellman v. Tiger Oil Co., 258 MICH 602 (1932) : 98 / more
- Testimony of George Merrill, in Harrison, et al., V. United States of America, U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh District... filed September 7, 1927) : 46 / more
- “Supply Committee, Scottish Estimates,” Parliamentary Debates (Official Report). House of Commons (1 June 1911) : 1279 / more
- OCR cross-column confusion, something somewhere at World’s Press News and Advertisers’ Review 46 (1951) : 35 / more
- Ruth Hogan, The Keeper of Lost Things : A Novel (2017) : 27 / more
not a ] ‘something’ but a ‘someone’; of that he was unreasonably sure. Once again, he removed the lid and inspected the contents,
- Walter Benjamin, “A Jacobin of our Time; On Werner Hegemann’s Das steinerne Berlin” (1930), translation in Metropolis Berlin : 1880–1940, Iain Boyd Whyte and David Frisby, eds., (2012) : 358 / more
...As he now presents himself as a someone of the most pronounced civic culture, a man who understands intimately the mutual play of culture and politics in any situation with which he is confronted, a man who approaches the planning of public facilities in American cities and the historical studies of the Prussian kings with the same exactness and imagination.
It is, admittedly, an extraordinary fantasy...and —
...Hegemann’s book is undoubtedly a standard work. It is hard to put down, without asking what the reason might be that it fails to make the short step that separates it from ultimate perfection, which would allow the book to exist independently of its subject and render it instead the destiny of its subject. If anything is needed at the Last Judgment, it is ventilation. Both in the practical and metaphorical sense. The site of negotiation is not ventilated, and the questions are not comprehensive...