FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1968   1969   1970   1971   1972   1973   1974   1975   1976   1977   1978   1979   1980   1981   1982   1983   1984   1985   1986   1987   1988   1989   1990   1991   1992  
1993   1994   1995   1996   1997   1998   1999   2000   2001   2002   2003   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008   2009   2010   2011   2012   2013   2014   2015   2016   2017   >>   >|  
-_J. West cor._ "Let the same be _her_ that thou hast appointed for thy servant Isaac."--_Bible cor._ "Although I knew it to be _him_."--_Dickens cor._ "Dear gentle youth, is't none but _thou_?"--_Dorset cor._ "Who do they say it is?"--_Fowler cor._ "These are her garb, not _she_; they but express Her form, her semblance, her appropriate dress."--_More cor._ UNDER NOTE I.--OF THE CASE DOUBTFUL. "I had no knowledge of _any connexion_ between them."--_Col. Stone cor._ "To promote iniquity in others, is nearly the same _thing_, as _to be_ the actors of it ourselves." (That is, "_For us_ to promote iniquity in others, is nearly the same _thing_ as _for us_ to be the actors of it _ourselves_.")--_Murray cor._ "It must arise from _a delicate_ feeling _in_ ourselves."--_Blair and Murray cor._ "_Because there has not_ been exercised a competent physical power for their enforcement."--_Mass. Legisl. cor._ "PUPILAGE, _n._ The state of a _pupil_, or scholar."--_Dictionaries cor._ "Then the other _part_, being the _definition, would include_ all verbs, of every description."--_Peirce cor._ "John's _friendship for me_ saved me from inconvenience."--_Id._ "William's _judgeship_"--or, "William's _appointment to the office of_ judge,--changed his whole demeanour."--_Id._ "William's _practical acquaintance with teaching_, was the cause of the interest he felt."--_Id._ "_To be_ but one among many, stifleth the chidings of conscience."--_Tupper cor._ "As for _the opinion that it is_ a close translation, I doubt not that many have been led into that error by the shortness of it."--_Pope cor._ "All presumption _that death is_ the destruction of living beings, must go upon _the_ supposition that they are compounded, and _therefore_ discerptible."--_Bp. Butler cor._ "This argues rather _that they are_ proper names."--_Churchill cor._ "But may it not be retorted, that _this gratification itself_, is that which excites our resentment?"--_Campbell cor._ "Under the common notion, _that it is_ a system of the whole poetical art."--_Blair cor._ "Whose _want of_ time, or _whose_ other circumstances, forbid _them to become_ classical scholars."--_Lit. Jour. cor._ "It would _prove him not to have been a mere_ fictitious personage." Or: "It would preclude the notion _that he was merely a_ fictitious personage."--_Phil. Mu. cor._ "For _heresy_, or under pretence _that they are_ heretics or infidels."--_Oath cor._ "We may here add Dr. Horne'
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1968   1969   1970   1971   1972   1973   1974   1975   1976   1977   1978   1979   1980   1981   1982   1983   1984   1985   1986   1987   1988   1989   1990   1991   1992  
1993   1994   1995   1996   1997   1998   1999   2000   2001   2002   2003   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008   2009   2010   2011   2012   2013   2014   2015   2016   2017   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

William

 
notion
 

actors

 

Murray

 

promote

 
iniquity
 
personage
 
fictitious
 

destruction

 

Butler


beings

 
supposition
 

compounded

 
living
 

discerptible

 
shortness
 

conscience

 

Tupper

 

chidings

 

stifleth


interest

 
opinion
 

presumption

 
translation
 

circumstances

 

forbid

 
pretence
 
poetical
 

classical

 

preclude


scholars

 

heresy

 
system
 

common

 

infidels

 
teaching
 

Churchill

 

argues

 

proper

 
retorted

resentment

 

Campbell

 

excites

 

heretics

 

gratification

 

include

 
semblance
 

express

 
connexion
 

knowledge