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Examples
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(And believe me, Wroth is not one who likes to be waxed, either).
State of Play Ulysses 2009
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(And believe me, Wroth is not one who likes to be waxed, either).
Archive 2009-12-01 Ulysses 2009
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This argument may seem to be undercut by the paranomasia of "Wroth" in "worth"; May Paulissen points out that "worth" was at the time the common pronunciation of "Wroth" (Paulissen 22).
Pamphilia, to Amphilanthus: A Sonnet Sequence from the Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania 1621
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Clements, Oratory, citing Wroth in his essay in Literature of the American Indians: Views and Interpretations, ed.
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
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Lawrence Counselman Wroth 1884–1970, the librarian of the John Carter Brown library at Brown University, believed that nineteenth-century “supporters of American literary independence . . . could . . . suggest that Indian speech making would provide some of the basis for a distinctive American heritage of letters.”
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
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Clements, Oratory, citing Wroth in his essay in Literature of the American Indians: Views and Interpretations, ed.
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
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Lawrence Counselman Wroth 1884–1970, the librarian of the John Carter Brown library at Brown University, believed that nineteenth-century “supporters of American literary independence . . . could . . . suggest that Indian speech making would provide some of the basis for a distinctive American heritage of letters.”
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
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Lawrence Counselman Wroth 1884–1970, the librarian of the John Carter Brown library at Brown University, believed that nineteenth-century “supporters of American literary independence . . . could . . . suggest that Indian speech making would provide some of the basis for a distinctive American heritage of letters.”
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
-
Clements, Oratory, citing Wroth in his essay in Literature of the American Indians: Views and Interpretations, ed.
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
-
Lawrence Counselman Wroth 1884–1970, the librarian of the John Carter Brown library at Brown University, believed that nineteenth-century “supporters of American literary independence . . . could . . . suggest that Indian speech making would provide some of the basis for a distinctive American heritage of letters.”
Bird Cloud Annie Proulx 2011
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