austen造句1 The collected Austen novels on CD-ROM will cost £35.
2 Austen has been living in New Guinea so long he's gone native.
3 What a precocious child — reading Jane Austen at the age of ten!
4 Gwyneth Paltrow goes the Jane Austen route in this tale of a meddler in the romantic lives of others.
5 Thus Austen represents in her a portrait of one who is a stranger to love but wedded to reason.
6 His brother Austen, affronted by the lack of respect paid to his seniority, reluctantly accepted the Admiralty outside the Cabinet.
7 I feared souvenir stands selling bumper stickers and Austen joke books.
8 In this case, however, Jane Austen does not assume that past values are irrecoverable.
9 In 1920, Austen Chamberlain transformed the system by allowing tax exemptions to be claimed nomatterhow big the taxpayer's income.
10 Austen Chamberlain, who succeeded him, had little skill in party leadership.
11 Austen is hot, and Amis puts much of our interest in her down to a fascination with class.
12 Austen thus advocates a conditional view of women's freedom within society.
13 Austen has been living in Papua New Guinea so long he's gone native.
14 Within the society that Jane Austen features there are many strict rules.
15 His second task was to bring Austen Chamberlain back into full communion.
16 Austen Chamberlain, despite his limitations, was an ally of a staunchness rarely seen in politics.
17 He approached his task, as Austen Chamberlain noted, with a new firmness and confidence.
18 Austen believes in love and marriage - the happy medium.
19 Although in many ways conservative, Jane Austen tolerates and even welcomes change.
20 In Austen the continent is a shadow across the horizon.
21 And as all worthy Austen women eventually do, I met and married a man I loved and respected.
22 Jane Austen need not have feared.
23 But for Jane Austen, that was just the beginning.
24 The collected Austen novels on CD-ROM will cost £5.
25 I was reading Jane Austen and dreaming about college.
26 Does this mean that the message hasn't got across, that Jane Austen has somehow failed to communicate?
27 Today, antagonism towards Birmingham remains as strong as when Jane Austen wrote the words in Emma in 1816.
28 Morals play an important part in both novels and the reader notices that Jane Austen is actually a moralist.
29 Now his fate is to be for ever bracketed in the political record books with Austen Chamberlain.
30 Go to bed wishing I could have bestowed an extra twenty years' active life upon Bunuel and Jane Austen.