Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Ola
what does it mean ? " out of the stone " ??
I'm translating now the second chapter of the novel called Joseph Andrews and I can'y understand the previous expression.
The words are almost out of the stone with antiquity.
25 oct. 2014 19:00
Réponses · 4
2
Yes. It is referring to the "stone age." As in; those painting are so very old, straight out of the stone age.
25 octobre 2014
1
Here's the passage if anyone wants to check it:
https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/f/fielding/henry/joseph_andrews/book1.2.html
It's definitely not about the stone age. However, it is a strange turn of phrase and I wondered if it was a playful reference to "epitaph" (ie. "what is written on a gravestone").
The best guess I can give is that it's a reference to the text written on King Arthur's mythical "sword in the stone". Old, poetic verse with a prediction. Lines that sound like verse from the Dark Ages. Does that make sense to you as well?
26 octobre 2014
1
doesnt say the stone age? i think they are just trying to show the words used were old fashioned or dated
25 octobre 2014
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Ola
Compétences linguistiques
Arabe, Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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