English, asked by neerub076, 6 months ago

what is the meaning of the sentence " There dwelt a Miller Hale and bold .​

Answers

Answered by ashishjuneja16may
2

Answer:

The location required by “dwelt” is “beside the river Dee”, and it is stretching credibility to assume that “beside the river Dee” is in apposition to “there”. This sentence is grammatically equivalent to “a hale and bold miller dwelt beside the river Dee.”

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Answered by Blackpinklovers
4

There dwelt a miller hale and bold, Beside the river Dee; ... The location required by “dwelt” is “beside the river Dee”, and it is stretching credibility to assume that “beside the river Dee” is in apposition to “there”. This sentence is grammatically equivalent to “a hale and bold miller dwelt beside the river Dee.”

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