Robert W . Greene, a literary critic, noted about the intentions of his works, " He seeks a balance of equivalences, an equation between the order of things and the order of words ".
12.
Macaulay ( 1901 : xvi, 1908 : sec 33 ) finds his style technically superior to Chaucer's, admiring " the metrical smoothness of his lines, attained without unnatural accent or forced order of words ".
13.
This symbolic role is still shown in the order of words of the minister's official designation, " Keeper of Seals, Minister of Justice " ( " Garde des Sceaux, Ministre de la Justice " ).
14.
For example, order of words ( i . e . " man bites dog " versus " dog bites man " ) often does not matter in Greek, so textual variants that flip the order of words often have no consequences.
15.
For example, order of words ( i . e . " man bites dog " versus " dog bites man " ) often does not matter in Greek, so textual variants that flip the order of words often have no consequences.
16.
Historians agree that at some point in history the order of words in this construction shifted, putting the noun at the end rather than beginning, like in the present-day construction " Number Classifier Noun ".
17.
The Roman title " Pontifex Maximus " was rendered in Greek inscriptions and literature of the time as " ???????? " ( literally, " high priest " | ) or by a more literal translation and order of words as " ??????z? ???????? " ( literally, " greatest high priest ".
18.
Criticism for Frye, then, is not a task of evaluation that is, of rejecting or accepting a literary work but rather simply of recognizing it for what it is and understanding it in relation to other works within the'order of words'( Cotrupi 4 ).
19.
Now these elements can be ordered based on the prefix order of words : a decimal number " n " is below some other number " m " if there is some string of digits w such that " nw " = " m ".
20.
These include altering spellings so they are accurate and consistent; changing punctuation by, for example, adding apostrophes to Molly Bloom's previously unpunctuated soliloquy; breaking up compound words so that, for instance, " lookingglass " becomes " looking glass " and altering the order of words for better logical sense.