987 resultados para Zeng, Guofan, 1811-1872.


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Esta dissertação investiga tendências pronominais encontradas na obra O Tronco do Ipê (1871), de José de Alencar, situando o romance no contexto literário em que se insere o autor o Romantismo. Também utilizamos o romance Sonhos dOuro (1872) em situações em que foram necessários contrapontos. O primeiro elemento pronominal analisado foi a frequência e a deriva gramatical da construção a gente, típica da variedade americana da língua portuguesa e etapa final do processo da gramaticalização, que a tornou equivalente a nós. Quanto ao a gente, nossa finalidade foi averiguar em que medida esse recurso da língua coloquial foi incorporado pelo ilustre prosador brasileiro. O segundo elemento analisado foi a colocação pronominal, largamente mencionada tanto por críticos contemporâneos ao autor cearense quanto por aqueles estudiosos do legado alencariano e romântico para a expressão linguística na literatura. Para a colocação pronominal, levantamos dados diversos que possam confirmar ou questionar os estudos já existentes. Por fim, estudamos ainda o significado do aparecimento/ausência do pronome reto como acusativo ou como acusativo-sujeito na língua literária de Alencar. Esta pesquisa pretende ser uma contribuição a um capítulo da história do português escrito no Brasil

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Spencer Fullerton Baird (Fig. 1), a noted systematic zoologist and builder of scientific institutions in 19th century America, persuaded the U.S. Congress to establish the United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries1 in March 1871. At that time, Baird was Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Following the death of Joseph Henry in 1878, he became head of the institution, a position he held until his own demise in 1887. In addition to his many duties as a Smithsonian official, including his prominent role in developing the Smithsonian’s Federally funded National Museum as the repository for governmental scientific collections, Baird directed the Fish Commission from 1871 until 1887. The Fish Commission’s original mission was to determine the reasons and remedies for the apparent decline of American fisheries off southern New England as well as other parts of the United States. In 1872, Congress further directed the Commission to begin a large fish hatching program aimed at increasing the supply of American food f

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The year 1985 was one of celebration for the Woods Hole Laboratory of the National Marine Fisheries Service's Northeast Fisheries Center. The reason was the one hundredth anniversary of the completion and occupation of the first facility in the world dedicated to marine fisheries research. Spencer Fullerton Baird, Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and newly appointed first Commissioner of the nascent U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries visited Woods Hole in the summer of 1871 to establish a base from which to begin the investigations mandated by Congress when they established the "Fish Commission." During the following three summers (1872-74), operations were conducted from several other localities along the New England coast. During the course of those four years Baird determined that Woods Hole offered the most suitable natural and physical amenities for the investigations being conducted by the Fish Commission at that time, and for those envisioned for the future. The base for Commission operations was returned to Woods Hole in the summer of 1875 and has remained there ever since, through times fair and foul and several agency changes.