thistle kilt tartan pattern bagpipe Flower of Scotland (national anthem) O Flower of Scotland, Those days are past now, When will we see And in the past Your like again, they must remain, That fought and died for, But we can still rise now, Your wee bit Hill and Glen, And be the nation again, And stood against him, That stood against him, Proud Edward's Army, Proud Edward's Army, And sent him homeward, And sent him homeward, Tae think again. Tae think again. The Hills are bare now, Flower of Scotland, And Autumn leaves When will we see lie thick and still, your like again, O'er land that is lost now, That fought and died for, Which those so dearly held, Your wee bit Hill and Glen, That stood against him, And stood against him, Proud Edward's Army, Proud Edward's Army,
cuddlesome, fearsome, handsome, tiresome, cumbersome o –en – of the nature of X earthen, woollen, wooden. Non-productive - archaic Adverb forming suffixes are only native o -ly – deadjectival suffix – firstly, fully, angrily, shortly, hardly, dryly (NB difference in meaning) o -long – lasting - Daylong, life-long, headlong o -ward(s) – towards – homeward, onward, eastward, backwards, inwards o -wise – in the manner of X/like X or spatial arrangement or concerning X – likewise, sarongwise, lengthwise, foodwise, moneywise Nominal suffixes are often employed to derive abstract nouns from verbs, adjectives, and nouns. Such abstract nouns can denote actions, results of activities, or other related concepts, but also properties, qualities, and the like. o Agent/doer
sank that evening. Yorktown dive-bombers pummeled Soryu with three half-ton bombs; within 20 minutes she had to be abandoned, and a few hours later was torpedoed by an American submarine. The work of December 7 had not been completed, but avenged. The rest was anticlimax. Later in the day Hiryu was sunk, and the Japanese in turn got Yorktown. Yamamoto next day realized that he was beaten. He called off the invasion of Midway and retreated, keeping close to his cabin on the homeward voyage. The samurai chieftains canceled plans for further advances and shifted from offense to defense. The failure to destroy the American Navy knocked the keystone from Yamamoto's strategy, and his words to Prince Konoye before the war haunted him: "I must also tell you that, should the war be prolonged for two or three years, I have no confidence in our ultimate victory." And not only did American industrial strength rise up like a specter. Japan's lack