This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
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A70606 | And if so, what a toil must it be to suppute twenty or thirty of these in a night? |
A70606 | Who is it that will now question the force of Gun- powder, or whether the Mercury rise and fall in the Baroscope at fair or foul Weather? |
A70606 | or does this Definition lead him to improve Light for the advancement and help of our senses, or other advantage of mankind? |
A70606 | quarter of 39.2) inches vibrate in a minute? |
A60472 | Are all springs troubled with those defects? |
A60472 | At what time will they differ? |
A60472 | But t is observed that they vary many times from the Sun, how can this be but from the Pendulum? |
A60472 | By what means may these detents be known, or how shall we find them, when there may be occasion to make use of them? |
A60472 | Chi ▪ When a Pendulum is once rectified will it not alter like the Ballance Clock? |
A60472 | Do they strike on one bell onely or on more? |
A60472 | From whence do those Movements that go without weights receive their motion? |
A60472 | Have you nothing more to deliver concerning Pendulums? |
A60472 | How are these quarter and repeating Clocks to be managed in their setting? |
A60472 | How do sounds of Bells spread or move in the air? |
A60472 | How doth the repeating Clock strike? |
A60472 | How is it the Spring- makers fault? |
A60472 | How is this proved? |
A60472 | How must it be ordered as to its striking? |
A60472 | How often do Clocks require to be cleansed? |
A60472 | Is it considerable whether or no we keep a true time in winding up Watches or Clock ●? |
A60472 | Is it possible so to adjust a fuzey to the draught of a spring, that there shall be no alteration of time in those Watches which it moveth? |
A60472 | Is not air and dust very Injurious to a Clock? |
A60472 | Is the draught of a spring equally in a ● l places alike, or doth it differ according as it may be str ● ● ned? |
A60472 | Is the long pendulum subject to variation as the short one is? |
A60472 | May there be any rules given for the setting, and keeping in order these motions, or may their use be known without experience? |
A60472 | Secondly, what diminution of substance in a bell of any weight, will be sufficient to make that Bell a tone more bas ●? |
A60472 | Suppose a watch should be set to a Sun- dial betimes in the morning, what then? |
A60472 | Tell me precisely what hours are fittest for that purpose? |
A60472 | Thirdly, what bore a Bell of any weight requires to majorate the sound thereof to the highest degree possible? |
A60472 | What altitude may the Sun attain before we may put confidence in a Sun- dial? |
A60472 | What conclusions may be drawn from hence? |
A60472 | What do you infer from hence? |
A60472 | What is a spring? |
A60472 | What is required in its officiousness to make it good or excellent? |
A60472 | What is the inequality of time and wherin doth it consist? |
A60472 | What is the most true and exact way of justening Clocks by the Sun? |
A60472 | What is the reason of this inequality of time? |
A60472 | What is the refraction of the Suns beams, and how is it caused? |
A60472 | What may be the quantity of their error? |
A60472 | What must be observed when Clocks or Watches want cleansing or repairing? |
A60472 | What reason have you to believe the Suns unequal Course to be the cause? |
A60472 | What weight of Hammer is best for to make the Bell give forth its true and natural sound? |
A60472 | When it is thus sitted to its work, how doth it perform or draw, so as to give motion to the wheels after it is wound up? |
A60472 | Which way must the hand be turned when we set either Clock or watch? |
A60472 | are not these refractions always equal throughout the year? |
A60472 | or what diminution of depth shall be sufficient to make it a note sharper? |
A12614 | & well cōsidering that wee daylie incline to our end, our death, and that we euer dye? |
A12614 | But what? |
A12614 | Euthymius expounding the vvords of the Psalmist: who is the man vvho desireth life, and to see good daies? |
A12614 | My meaning, my application is, that novv a dayes are many Christians vvho beleiue, and adore a God; but hovv? |
A12614 | The King asked of him, how many are the yeares thou hast lived? |
A12614 | Then well may I say, if the Heathens valued time at so high a rate, with what greater reasō should the Christian esteeme of it, compleatly prise it? |
A12614 | What a pretious iewell Time is? |
A12614 | and that thou takest away it''s time, doth injure it, and stealest from it, and employest it so ill? |
A12614 | art thou so void of consideration and iudg ● ment? |
A12614 | or such other? |
A12614 | poore vvretch if to morrovv, vvhy not to day? |
A12614 | poore wretch as I am, vvas euer knowne the like? |
A12614 | so that obserue thy will I speake with more reason then doe you, for you are not maister of any time but of this present day, vvhat say I? |
A12614 | tell me farther, doe not many dye vvithout confession, vvithout giuing account penitently of their trespasses? |
A12614 | this being the safest, the most secure, hence the best? |
A12614 | vntill time glide away, fully make his flight vntill the houre compleatly be runne? |
A12614 | vvhat grace of delivery, vvhat eloquence, what sweetly- spun, or flowing speech of man can declare it, lively and sprightly expresse it? |
A12614 | vvhat is more excellent? |
A12614 | vvhat is there more beautifull, more to be beloved then time? |
A12614 | vvhat more deare? |
A12614 | vvhat of greater benefit? |
A12614 | vvho is he, vvho can vvith full extent of spirit and vnderstanding apprehend of vvhat price, of vvhat vvorth is time? |
A12614 | vvho is there, vvho is capable? |
A12614 | what vrge you, what may be called your true meanings herein? |