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Samersamer1974 Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

meaning

Hello
what does mean " of" when comes at the beginning in the sentence like this:
'Of pride of remembrance of the encounter with the bear on that hillside in the early spring.
thank you
  

Top answer

What you've quoted is not a sentence. It is part of a conversation. A: [Was it a pleasure] of pride [that you felt]?

  • What you've quoted is not a sentence.
  • It is part of a conversation.
  • A: [Was it a pleasure] of pride [that you felt]?
  • B: [It was a pleasure] of pride of remembrance of the encounter with the bear on that hillside in the early spring.
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3 Answers
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What you've quoted is not a sentence. It is part of a conversation.

A: [Was it a pleasure] of pride [that you felt]?
B: [It was a pleasure] of pride of remembrance of the encounter with the bear on that hillside in the early spring.
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Hello
You are right the sentence from story ,and there are many sentences like this and i don't understand what does it mean.
can i understand like this answer for example i have this conversation:
"She looked at him and laughed ,then slapped him on the knee.
-Of Pablo? you have seen Pablo?
-well,then,of Rafael .I have seen Rafael.
- Of Rafael neither.
- Of no one , the
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samersamer1974Of Pablo? you have seen Pablo?-well,then,of Rafael .I have seen Rafael.- Of Rafael neither.- Of no one , the gypsy said .
I looked it up, and it appears to be a conversation involving a non-native speaker of English. It's meant to sound like broken English!

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