Three prayers composed by Jane Austen
I was glancing through a volume of Jane Austen's miscellaneous writings and came across three prayers she composed. It is always striking to read actual prayers like this. It really shows the true Christian nature of the person (prayer can be a real sign of true regeneration), in this case the famous novelist whose novels really don't express necessarily a deep faith in an explicit way:
First Prayer
Second
Third
1 Comments:
In writing this post I was confronted by a common word thing that I finally looked up: when to use who's or whose.
Here is the easy solution:
When should you use who's instead of whose?
Well, who's is always short for who is. For example:
* Who's that guy in the red tie?
* Who's the actress in Out of Africa?
The easiest way to explain whose is to say that you use it whenever it would be wrong to say who is. For example:
* Is he the guy whose tie was red?
* Was it Streep whose career peaked with Out of Africa?
* Whose PC is this?
The different uses of these words is illustrated by the following pair of sentences:
* Bob, who's normally prompt, was late today.
* Bob, whose record is exemplary, was late today.
In summary, use who's when you mean who is and whose otherwise.
From here:
http://www.betterwritingskills.com/tip-w024.html
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