One moming early in 1913, Hardy found, among the letters on his breakfast table, a large
untidy envelope decorated with Indian stamps. When he opened it, he found sheets of paper by no
means clean, on which, in a non-English script, were line after line of symbols.
Hardy glanced at them without enthusiasm. He felt, more than anything, bored. He glanced at
the letter, written in halting English, signed by an unknown Indian, asking him to give an opinion of
these mathematical discoveries. The script appeared to consist of theorems, most of them, wild or
Tantastic looking, one or two already well - known, laid out as though they were original. There were
no proofs of any kinds.
Hardy was not only bored, but also irritated. It seemed like a curious kind of fraud. He put
the manuscript aside and went on with his day's routine.
(1) what are the adjectives?
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
Large
Untidy
Indian
non-English
halting
mathematical
wild or Tantastic
curious
I think these are the adjectives, though there may be more that I've missed
Answered by
2
Answer:
halting
curious
English
tidy
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