0
Piano cpu 538 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Vocabulaire-Jane Austen

Hello, i am a french student and i have work to do in english litterature, i can't found what an "inch f ivory" means if you know it help me please Emotion: wink

thank you

  

Top answer

piano cpu 538 "inch f ivory" Do you mean "inch of ivory"? Whichever it is, please provide more context.

  • piano cpu 538 "inch f ivory" Do you mean "inch of ivory"?
  • Whichever it is, please provide more context.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

4 Answers
0
piano cpu 538"inch f ivory"

Do you mean "inch of ivory"? Whichever it is, please provide more context.

0

Can you please supply some context?

Where did you find this expression?

Clive

PS - In your brief post, you have at least 10 errors. Can you find them and fix the?

The personal pronoun I is always written as a capital letter.

Adjectives relating to nationality start with a capital eg English, French.

Each sentence must start with a capital letter

0

Please write in good English when you ask a question.

Is this the quote you are referring to?

The society in which Jane Austen lived was certainly no help; but neither was it a hindrance, because it didn’t stop her. She made her choices, as any artist does, according to the dimensions of her gift, for she knew exactly what she wanted to inscribe on her two inches of

0
piano cpu 538

Hello, i am a french student and i have work to do in english litterature, i can't found what an "inch f ivory" means if you know it help me please

thank you

From previous posts I deduce that "an inch of ivory" can be paraphrased as "a very small amount of paper" — if you want to update the metaphor.

CJ

Related Questions