EMMA Yes, but I shall miss her urging me. She was a selfless a friend as I have ever had, and I hope to say someday that I have done half so much for someone as Mrs Weston did for me. MR KNIGHTLEY You must be happy that she settled so well.
EMMA One does not like to generalize about so many people all at once, Mr Knightley, but you may be sure that men know nothing of their hearts, whether they be six and twenty, or six and eighty.
EMMA I know there is no better creature in all the world, but you must allow that blended alongside of the good there is an equal among of ridiculous in her.
Jane Austen began writing Emma in 1814, though it was not published until 1816, and then it was anonymous (as were all of her novels initially due to the prejudices of her times).
Emma Woodhouse, the eponymous heroine (of sorts) is endowed with wealth, good-looks, prestige and is, moveover, well aware of how clever she is. Anne Taylor, who had been extremely close to both Emma and her father, moves out to live with Mr Weston.
Emma attempts to aid Harriet with a series of disastrous schemes to prove the girl to be of worthy parentage and deserving of a good man. However, in doing so, she prevents Harriet from marrying Robert Martin who despite being an eligible young farmer is deemed by young Woodhouse to be 'beneath' Harriet.
Emma (1816) is Jane Austen'scomic masterpiece in which Emma Woodhouse finds her match-making skills sadly misdirected as she learns humility and self-knowledge at the same time as she discovers love.
Emma's imperious hold on events and behaviors threatens to choke everyone involved until she is shown her mistakes and is saved from social catastrophe by Mr.
Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex her.
Though Harriet’s parentage is unknown, Emma is convinced that Harriet deserves to be a gentleman’s wife and sets her friend’s sights on Mr.
Elton, spurned by Emma and offended by her insinuation that Harriet is his equal, leaves for the town of Bath and marries a girl there almost immediately.
Emma laughs at Knightley’s suggestion and loses Knightley’s approval when she flirts with Frank and insults Miss Bates, a kindhearted spinster and Jane’s aunt, at a picnic.
Emma was given the best care possible, unfortunately there was nothing that could have been done for her condition if it had been known.
Emma’s vital signs remained as they had been in the tank, and as we progressed along, we knew she was going to be fine.
Emma gave us a quick indication of her preferences for carrying objects in her mouth, when she grabbed a small section of the stretcher in her mouth and carried that around the pool for 4 hours.
Emma Woodhouse is the first Jane Austen heroine with no financial concerns, which, she declares to the naïve Miss Smith, is the reason that she has no inducement to marry.
While Emma differs strikingly from Austen's other heroines in these two respects, she resembles Elizabeth Bennet and Anne Elliot, among others, in another respect: she is an intelligent young woman with too little to do and no ability to change her location or everyday routine.
Emma's determined and inept matchmaking may represent a muted protest against the narrow scope of a wealthy woman's life, especially that of a woman who is single and childless.
The real evils, indeed, of Emma's situation were the power of having rather too much her own way, and a disposition to think a little too well of herself...." Chapter 1, pg.
Emma had been Miss Taylor's single charge since her sister Isabella married seven years ago, and it was hard for Emma to imagine spending her days without her.
Emma tried to keep her father happy with a game of backgammon, but they were interrupted by Mr.
With the fourth paragraph, the narrator ironically calls Emma's situation "evils" and "disadvantages"; these adjectives are of course ironic because her situation would ordinarily be regarded as highly desirable and enviable.
Emma feels the loss of Miss Temple, who was "particularly interested in herself, in every pleasure, every scheme of hers–one to whom she could speak every thought as it arose, and who had such an affection for her as could never find fault" (p.
Emma's vanity is gratified by Harriet's admiration of her and of Hartfield, with the implicit acknowledgement of Emma's superiority and Harriet's inferiority.
The general purpose of EMMA is to represent information automatically extracted from a user's input by an interpretation component, where input is to be taken in the general sense of a meaningful user input in any modality supported by the platform.
In EMMA, this refers to use a particular input is serving, for example, as part of a recording or transcription, as part of a dialogue, or as a means to verify the user's identity.
EMMA provides a simple structural syntax for the organization of interpretations and instances, and an annotative syntax to apply the annotation to the input data at different levels.
www.w3.org /TR/2005/WD-emma-20050916 (9677 words)
Emma(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Emma is a faithful adaptation of Austen's most cherished novel and unlike Clueless...the audience has more than a passing interest in the characters here.
Emma is delightful, a breezy romancecomedy of complication and confusion, with Gwynneth Paltrow a winning delight as the titular Ms.
There are moments in Emma where Paltrow adopts a facial expression so utterly perfect that her infuriating ability to make you care about her despite her pettiness and manipulation seems drawn from the soul of Austen'snovel.
EMMA distinguishes itself from other tools by going after a unique feature combination: support for large-scale enterprise software development while keeping individual developer's work fast and iterative.
EMMA can instrument classes for coverage either offline (before they are loaded) or on the fly (using an instrumenting application classloader).
EMMA does not require access to the source code and degrades gracefully with decreasing amount of debug information available in the input classes.
Emma (1996)(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Bates and Miss Bates, mother and daughter in the film, are played by real-life mother and daughter Phyllida Law and Sophie Thompson (who are also real life mother and sister to Academy Award winning actress and screenwriter 'Thompson, Emma').
Revealing mistakes: Harriet runs her fingers along a harp and the sound that is heard is a perfect chord going up a scale, fitting in perfectly with the music that is being played.
In reality, it would be virtually impossible to pluck a perfect chord when you run your fingers casually along the strings, and secondly any sound made would be going *down* scale, since she was dragging her fingers that way down the strings.
Emma is pleased with the gift, of course, but that just isn't the way she remembers her village and so she buys some art materials and paints her own village her way.
Emma is just one of many strong elderly characters in children's picture books.
Emma has a lot in common with Miss Rumphius and that's good because they are each illuminated by Barbara Cooney's illustrations.
Emma® is a unique service that's helping organizations everywhere bring style and sophistication to their email marketing and communications.
With custom-designed templates, real-time response tracking, and features designed to help you grow your audience the right way, Emma will change the way you interact with your customers, members and fans.
Emma is used by more than 5,000 fine organizations around the world, including...
www.myemma.com /index.php (164 words)
Amazon.com: Emma: DVD: Gwyneth Paltrow,James Cosmo,Greta Scacchi,Alan Cumming,Denys Hawthorne,Sophie Thompson,Jeremy ...(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Emma is a wealthy and bored young woman in Regency England.
Paltrow is a fair actress, but I think she is miscast as Emma, the snobbish heiress whose greatest interest is arranging the life of people around her to her own satisfaction.
Austen'sEmma is a strong if sometimes unlikeable young woman, but Paltrow passes her off with crinkly-nosed cuteness.
The eponymous heroine is the charming (but perhaps too clever for her own good) Emma Woodhouse, who manages to deceive herself in a number of ways (including as to who is really the object of her own affections), even though she (and the reader) are often in possession of evidence pointing toward the truth.
It describes Emma Watson's return, after a long absence, to her family, who are on the lower financial fringes of the "genteel".
She attracts the interest of a nobleman (and according to tradition in Jane Austen's family, she was later to receive and refuse an offer of marriage from him, and marry a clergyman).
Emma Townshend is Pete Townshend's daughter, and the cover of her album shows her pouting at the camera against a purple background, her lips rouged,...
Emma Townshend (born 1969) is a singer, songwriter and pianist.
Download, listen and watch Emma Townshend music, mp3's, song lyrics, music videos, Internet radio, live performances, concerts, and more on AOL Music.