Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Annotations to 'Thank You, Jeeves' by P. G. Wodehouse. Lord Jasper Murgatroyd. Murgatroyd was a name Wodehouse often used for characters mentioned in passing – it is one of those names that seems to fit equally well to aristocrats (the style “Lord Jasper Murgatroyd” implies that he is the younger son of a duke) or to butlers and stablemen.

  2. Thank You, Jeeves! is a 1936 American comedy film directed by Arthur Greville Collins, written by Stephen Gross and Joseph Hoffman, ... Although the film bears the same title as one of P.G. Wodehouse's novels, and the two leading characters are Jeeves (played by Treacher) and Bertie Wooster ...

  3. Bertie escapes to his cottage only to find an intoxicated Brinkley, who chases Bertie with a carving knife into his bedroom, then sets the cottage ablaze. Only Jeeves, brilliant Jeeves, can set Bertie's world aright. Don't miss other titles in the Jeeves series. Public Domain (P)1994 BBC Audiobooks Ltd. Series: Jeeves & Wooster, Book 5.

  4. Thank You, Jeeves. By: P. G. Wodehouse. Narrated by: Jonathan Cecil. Length: 6 hrs and 4 mins. 4.6 (53 ratings) Try for $0.00. Prime members: New to Audible? Get 2 free audiobooks during trial. Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection.

  5. Thank You, Jeeves is a Jeeves comic novel by P. G. Wodehouse, first published in the United Kingdom on 16 March 1934 by Herbert Jenkins, London, and in the United States on 23 April 1934 by Little, Brown and Company, New York.. The story had previously been serialised, in the Strand Magazine in the UK from August 1933 to February 1934, and in the US in Cosmopolitan Magazine from January to ...

  6. P. G. Wodehouse (1881-1975) was an English comic writer who enjoyed enormous popular success for more than seventy years. He is best known for creating Jeeves, the quintessential servant. (Jeeves is often mistakenly referred to as a butler; he was, in fact, a valet, or "gentleman's personal gentleman.") His other works include the Blandings Castle novels and a wide range of farcical novels and ...

  7. 22 de ene. de 2015 · The ten words that follow all appear to have been coined by Wodehouse and deserve, we think, to gain wider currency. Let’s make it so! Crispish. An adjective meaning ‘somewhat crisp’, from the 1930 novel Very Good, Jeeves : ‘When not pleased Aunt Dahlia, having spent most of her youth in the hunting-field, has a crispish way of ...