| 21. | He called that an absolute abridgment of the people's rights . . ..
|
| 22. | Brannigan explained the process of abridgment : " What they do is prioritize characters.
|
| 23. | They perceive a windbag novelist whose corpulent prose epics are palatable nowadays only in abridgments.
|
| 24. | Elsewhere, Mussorgsky made abridgments and additions.
|
| 25. | I always had a sort of basic dislike of abridgment, but now I know why.
|
| 26. | Sounds simple enough, but abridgment is the most controversial aspect of spoken-word audio.
|
| 27. | This helps the abridgment be less driven by plot and allows room for more character development.
|
| 28. | And the abridgment is the same.
|
| 29. | There are also indications that the present work is an abridgment of a significantly larger work.
|
| 30. | In America, Houghton Mifflin secured the rights to the Dugdale abridgment on 29 July 1933.
|