User:Ro Thorpe: Difference between revisions
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Robert Thorpe, born in [[London]] on the 100th day of the 50th year of the 20th century, living in [[Esposende]], [[Portugal]]. I have a degree in [[English language|English]] from [[Peterhouse]], [[Cambridge University|Cambridge]]. For many years I worked as a teacher of the language, in [[Mâcon]], [[France]]; [[Mondovì]], [[Italy]]; [[London]], [[England]], and finally in various locations in Portugal. | Robert Thorpe, born in [[London]] on the 100th day of the 50th year of the 20th century, living in [[Esposende]], [[Portugal]]. I have a degree in [[English language|English]] from [[Peterhouse]], [[Cambridge University|Cambridge]]. For many years I worked as a teacher of the language, in [[Mâcon]], [[France]]; [[Mondovì]], [[Italy]]; [[London]], [[England]], and finally in various locations in Portugal. | ||
==Ro-bot== | |||
removes Incorrect or Unnecessary Capital Letters like These. Proper capitalisation is important to distinguish the general from the particular: the Earth goes round the Sun, and if there's too much sun the earth dries out and develops cracks. | |||
Fans of different types of music often capitalise them, from [[jazz]] to [[jungle]], a habit which may stem from the names of music charts. Some people capitalise the names of currencies, probably because many of them sound like proper nouns, [[franc]], for example, or [[Deutschmark|mark]]. Of course those two have now ([[franc|almost]]) vacated the scene in favour of the equally capitalised-sounding [[euro]]. | |||
[[CZ:What's Your Message?|> CZ:What's Your Message?]]/[[User:Robert Thorpe/World Alphabetical Time|World Alphabetical Time]] | [[CZ:What's Your Message?|> CZ:What's Your Message?]]/[[User:Robert Thorpe/World Alphabetical Time|World Alphabetical Time]] |
Revision as of 19:50, 2 January 2010
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | |
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Use in English | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alphabetical word list | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Retroalphabetical list | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Common misspellings |
Articles I started
General language: Alphabet, Artworks known in English by a foreign title
Back-chaining
Colon (punctuation)
Commonwealth English
Cyrillic alphabet
English alphabet
Galician
Glottal stop
Homophone
International Phonetic Alphabet
Italian
Minimal pair
Nynorsk
Okina
Persian
Schwa
English, using special accent pronunciation system: Apostrophe: in cluster; in lists
British and American English English irregular nouns
English irregular verbs
English phonemes
English spellings (many thanks to Chris Day for the objet d'art at the top of the page; to find out what 'retroalphabetical' means, coined by me in 1995,
OED please note, click on one of the blue squares)
English verbs
French words in English
Hyphen
Silent letters in English
Spelling pronunciation
A
B
D
E
F
G
GH
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Music: Cover version
Mezzo TV
Rock music
Skiffle,
Instant Karma
Musicians: Bob Dylan
Captain Beefheart
Domenico Scarlatti
Frederick Delius
Howlin' Wolf
Jean Sibelius
Kraftwerk Leevi Madetoja
Ludwig van Beethoven
Miles Davis
Nico
Novelists: Franz Kafka
Ivy Compton-Burnett
Marcel Proust
Food: Crisps
Leitão assado à Bairrada
Portuguese cod casserole (bacalhau à Gomes de Sá)
Chess: Chess960
En passant
Time: CDT
Universal Time
Miscellaneous: Alan Odle
Arab
Ceres Daniel C. Dennett
Deutsche Mark
Michael Holding
One & Other
Thorperson
Robert Thorpe, born in London on the 100th day of the 50th year of the 20th century, living in Esposende, Portugal. I have a degree in English from Peterhouse, Cambridge. For many years I worked as a teacher of the language, in Mâcon, France; Mondovì, Italy; London, England, and finally in various locations in Portugal.
Ro-bot
removes Incorrect or Unnecessary Capital Letters like These. Proper capitalisation is important to distinguish the general from the particular: the Earth goes round the Sun, and if there's too much sun the earth dries out and develops cracks.
Fans of different types of music often capitalise them, from jazz to jungle, a habit which may stem from the names of music charts. Some people capitalise the names of currencies, probably because many of them sound like proper nouns, franc, for example, or mark. Of course those two have now (almost) vacated the scene in favour of the equally capitalised-sounding euro.
> CZ:What's Your Message?/World Alphabetical Time