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 |
---|---|
144850377 | ''•? » tinder the celebrated Andrew Doria. |
144850377 | - — — 1? |
144850377 | 1 AV/?. |
144850377 | 1 o. Exercifing? i trade, not ha¬ ving ferved as an apprentice. |
144850377 | 1/?, I write; idly, I do write;^dly. |
144850377 | 1/?. |
144850377 | 12.? |
144850377 | 13.?" |
144850377 | 197? |
144850377 | 1? |
144850377 | 2 I poled of I C I N E. 457.? |
144850377 | 2, Hijloria Romana a''Julio Ceefars ad Conjlan- tinum Magna? |
144850377 | 2.? |
144850377 | 23.? |
144850377 | 2? |
144850377 | 2r After mentioning feveral circumftances which did His conjec- not contribute to this appearance, this Father obferves, ture? |
144850377 | 4 ° |
144850377 | 460? |
144850377 | 4679 and wholefome? |
144850377 | 4721 letting at the arm maybe pra&ifed with advantage: Practh? |
144850377 | 4780 Practice 38?'' |
144850377 | 738? |
144850377 | 798.,^‘28? |
144850377 | 7? |
144850377 | 8j? |
144850377 | ; a variety very often fuch as are inimical to the cure? |
144850377 | ; nor are thof? |
144850377 | ; others derive it from pope Leo; and others from the beaft called/; ’(? », by reafon it is the loftieft of all verfes. |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? |
144850377 | ? 0 Herophilus, the difciple of Praxagoras, and cotem- Herophilus porary of Erafiftratus, is faid to have been the firft na''le great. |
144850377 | ? jJ|fbills*t)5 17 ’^ Pr*v^e8es fuperadded to bills by ftatute are,! au\c! |
144850377 | ? « a/''Colmar. |
144850377 | ?. |
144850377 | A cuftom, that lands fhall dtfeend to the moft worthy of the owner ’s blood, is void; for how( hall this worth be determined? |
144850377 | A debt upon y£w/>/ |
144850377 | A month after ad? |
144850377 | A thread? » is fixed to this ball, and goes over the pulley to I; by Plate Cl. XIX. |
144850377 | Agaricus querci- Agrimonia,{ Agri~? nonia E up a tor. |
144850377 | An magna lucis o um¬ bra?. |
144850377 | Aparine, Lift of Simple?. |
144850377 | At laft the fire is put out which had been kindled for th? |
144850377 | Breaches of.Y/>n?//contradts are, 1. non¬ payment of debts. |
144850377 | Bring your right? |
144850377 | But how can any third idea ferve to difeover a ner of am- relation between two others? |
144850377 | But how did they come into thefe volcanic hills, which like thofe of St Rocco near S. Ulderico, never contain any clay whatever? |
144850377 | But muft we then admit, that nothing but found can be imitated by found? |
144850377 | But of much more uncertain and dangerous event are the brown- coloured aphtha? |
144850377 | But the queftion is, Why fhould they rife as high at that very time on the oppofite fide, from a to e? |
144850377 | But though we may, at a medium, allow a third part of the weight with which any Ample machine is charged, for the friftion arifing from p-? |
144850377 | But, as all the members of fociety are naturally equal, it may be aiked, In whofe hands are the reins of government to be entrufted? |
144850377 | But, laftly, the moft univerfal and effedual way of difcoveiing the true meaning of a law, when the 3? |
144850377 | By violating die king ’s companion, his eldeft daugh? |
144850377 | By what means alfo are thefe aliments to be diffolved in the ftomach, when drink it withheld? |
144850377 | Cochliarion Cyathos 180 8640864 Oxybaphon 4 Cotyle Xeftes 576 J44 Choenix 48|Medimnos-lit I? |
144850377 | Coitus,(Co/?. |
144850377 | Colica(? 7ieconialis), in new- born children from a retention of the meconium. |
144850377 | Cujlom? |
144850377 | D. Cha?. |
144850377 | Defirous to pof- fefs the whole advantages of their trade, and jealous of aw? |
144850377 | Dr Cullen afks, May fmall dofes of emetics be of fer- vice? |
144850377 | Dyfo- pia Proximorum,{ Myopia?) |
144850377 | Egyptians, or from their neighbours o? |
144850377 | For as with fo much eafe — and their powers know no limits? |
144850377 | For example, fuppofe the queflion to be, Is it proper to marry? |
144850377 | For what would it avail him to know good from bad aftions, if he had no freedom of choice, nor could a- void the one and purfue the other? |
144850377 | For when the judge afleed Eulogius, his dea¬ con, Whether he would not worfliip Frudluofus? |
144850377 | Forty- one propofi- tions, extruded out of Luther ’s works? |
144850377 | From in fyntax? |
144850377 | H-* • M E G li In? |
144850377 | Had every foldier in the feudal army received the inveftiture of arms? |
144850377 | He whofe property is burdened, is ufually? |
144850377 | Hence thofe ar? |
144850377 | Hence we fee the neceflary connection of? ne the various parts of reafoning, and the dependence ano “[ i8] LOGIC. |
144850377 | His Syflem of Botany was firft adopted by Gronovius, in his Virginian Flora? |
144850377 | His mailer, furprifed at lombards exa<"* 0^e^ience> aiked, How it was poffible for- — — 1 — him to eat fuch a naufrous fruit? |
144850377 | I 4S47 cafe is known by the name of nephritis, and has been? KAC''. ’ricE already treated of. |
144850377 | In mills of the king ’s property) which is conftituted/ an? |
144850377 | In the evening they all came to his chamber; and the firft queftion he put to each was, Quid dubitas? |
144850377 | In the third ftage, therefore, the change is moft confiderable, as it determines the fate of the fick perfon; and this is moft commonly done J? |
144850377 | Is it not rather a mixture of fame- nefs and diverfity,—famenefs in the found, and diver- fity in the fignification? |
144850377 | Is it not the chief employ¬ ment of our feveral courts of judicature to determine in particular inftances, what is law, juitice, and equity? |
144850377 | It is indeed a general maxim with fome phyficians in;? |
144850377 | Jt TA- CKO C ORIT.T Croc oriiae L actsii. TA Baj? |
144850377 | Knot/''the Log- line, at fea, are the divifions of it- See the article Log- Knot, in ornithology. |
144850377 | LIN[ 424?] |
144850377 | LUMBRICAL, a name given to four mufcles of the fingers, and to as many of the toe?. |
144850377 | LUlUl? |
144850377 | Lucar de Guadiana( St.), a ftrong town of Spain, in Andalufia, on the confines of Algarve; feated on Luca? |
144850377 | M A D[ 4360] MAD are four, Calhetta, Camara de Lobo?, Ribeira braba, and Ponta de Sol in the capitania of Funchal, which is divided into 26 parifhes. |
144850377 | MARSAL, a town of France, in Lorrain, re- 25 G? |
144850377 | Mar- cion meeting St Polycarpus in''the ftreets of Rome, alk- ed him, whether he knew him? |
144850377 | Now we defire to know the diftance of the earth from the centre of its motion, namely, the fun? |
144850377 | Now, how can this be, if the proudejl part of mankind are alfo moft addided to it, unlefs we fnppofe vanity and pride to be the fame thing? |
144850377 | O father, what intends thy hand,( he cry’d, Againft: thy only fon? |
144850377 | Of what importance is it in many cafes to decide a- right whether an adtion ffiall be termed murder or mats/ laughter? |
144850377 | Or, were this effe& really produced, ought not the puerperal fever to be more common and fatal after the moft laborious deliveries? |
144850377 | Our ideas, according to propolki- what has been already obferved in the firft Part, are on.s int''? |
144850377 | Philip endeavoured as much as poffibie to prevent this confederacy from taking place? |
144850377 | Quis globus, O cives, caligine volvitur atra? |
144850377 | Redress, that is effefted by the at? |
144850377 | See Money- TaW?. |
144850377 | See alfo Sniv- Buildingy Deck, and Midship- Enriwi?. |
144850377 | See( the/« |
144850377 | She began the ufe of the earth- bath in Auguft, and repeated it eight time? |
144850377 | Sometimes about the nth or 14th day, on the 1 coming on of profufe fweats, the petechia? |
144850377 | Sometimes exceedingly fmall( hocks have been adminifteredT Sii? |
144850377 | Steatite?, Vog. |
144850377 | Th? |
144850377 | Th? |
144850377 | The civil lift is indeed properly the whole of the^/arfy?. |
144850377 | The eruption of the petechia? |
144850377 | The eyes fpark!ing? |
144850377 | The forms of trial upon criminal acchfations, oj? |
144850377 | The king, furprifed at the oddity of his appearance, immediately afked him what was the meaning of it, and whither he was going? |
144850377 | The miniflers were then called over yearly in the fynod, and were commonly afleed, Whether they had preached to the times? |
144850377 | The pains come by fits; and all the women who have had the jaundice and born children, agree, that they? |
144850377 | The viceroy? |
144850377 | The*? » « «*/taxer are, x. |
144850377 | This court is an infeparabie ingredient of every manor; and if the number of fuitors thould fo fail, a? |
144850377 | This general affedion is well known to explained? |
144850377 | This point fet¬ tled, let us next inquire what thofe ideas are which are capable of being thus unfolded? |
144850377 | To cover the ifland of Sicily from the Turks, Malta give? |
144850377 | To diftinguiih the diflemper from its manner of at¬ tacking the patient, our author ftyles the firft by Jhixtoriy? nd the other by congejlion. |
144850377 | To whom will Mifs*** be married? |
144850377 | Varying in its fymptom?. |
144850377 | What fury, O fon, Pofleffes thee to bend that mortal dart Againft thy father ’s head? |
144850377 | Wherein remain’d, For what could elfe? |
144850377 | Will you to your power caufe law and juflice, in mercy, to be executed in all your judgments? — King or queen. |
144850377 | Would not this require immenfe ftrength to effeCi? |
144850377 | Yqu may in fome nitafure judge of Pliny ’s manner, by one fhort letter to his friend, which runs thus: “ How fare you? |
144850377 | ^=*3 1 525? |
144850377 | anj? ze •''20. |
144850377 | as AG? |
144850377 | clxx?. |
144850377 | could he wear a feal, fbrpafs in( ilk and drefs, ufe enfigns- armorial, and enjoy all the other privileges of knighthood? |
144850377 | cupied by the lord, or dc, minus? nanerii, and his fer- vants. |
144850377 | i be regidered, and oath made concerning the proper- j? |
144850377 | m? |
144850377 | pleafantly? |
144850377 | t Number in the? |
144850377 | tender and pathetic, and that LAN[ 410?] |
144850377 | that is, Where fhall I take more? |
144850377 | that is, at “ leifure? |
144850377 | the longer arm AC at F, by means of the cord F)E? |
144850377 | to AB? |
144850377 | what have you laved?" |
144850377 | }!, per tiumifmata fo marmora antique?, Lacea, an excellent work. |
144850377 | “ As I do in the country? |
144850377 | “ Had you rather Caefar were living, and die all flaves, than that Casfar were dead, to live ail free men? ” Julius Ceefar. |
144850377 | “ Is it the coldnefs of wet linen which is feared? |
144850377 | “ The perfons affefted fte5nper dc* go out of their houfes in the night- time, and in every^bcdb? |
144850377 | “ The queftion,( fays he), Why do not all lavas cryftallize into prifmatical bafalts, or why do not the Vefuvian lavas( hew that form? |
144850373 | * Seethear- Branches of a Bridle, in the menage, are two piece? |
144850373 | -c, v?. |
144850373 | 1 B L O[ i: Blow, accompaniments of inflrumenta? |
144850373 | 1 By the flatues of fome monafteries it appears, that the lay- monks were to let their beards grow, and the priefls]? |
144850373 | 118? |
144850373 | 14 The new king proved yet a greater tyrant than his Hunneric a father, perfecuting the orthodox with the utmoft fury? |
144850373 | 16 s. per C.? |
144850373 | 1752 J7- 53 1754 1755 1756 1757 175? |
144850373 | 199 There is no need to confine this method to the pha-^ ■ nothfIr k? |
144850373 | 35. and diftinguiftied himfelf by writing a great number Borgo-/W(?, a town of the Mantuan in Italy, of works. |
144850373 | 40 g Though the Britifh were viAorious in this engage- Intended in- ment, the French were very little difconcerted by it, vaf10? |
144850373 | 4? |
144850373 | 58133 59369 60666 4< 61843 65080 5 64317 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 I4OO 1500 l600 1700 iSOO 14 I? |
144850373 | 6d.? |
144850373 | 77; |
144850373 | ; ng to the eaft and weft, through which th? |
144850373 | . |
144850373 | ? |
144850373 | A gentleman alked him the following queftion: Suppofe a field 423 yards long and 383 wide, what was the area? |
144850373 | A little to the weft A V E[ 907] AUG?-errhoa is the cave of the fibyl; but its noxious qualities feem li alfo to be loft. |
144850373 | After his return, he pub-*? fl^lttiri5;''lidied his Ophthalmographia in 1676. |
144850373 | Again, fuppofe a canal was to be dug 426 feet long, 263 wide, and 2 feet and a half deep, how many cubical yards of earth are to be removed? |
144850373 | AmongtheGer- Battle? |
144850373 | Anciently, indeed, a perfon became god- father of the child by •2] B E A barely touching his beard: thus hiflorians relate, that Beared? |
144850373 | And in what crifis have they me¬ rited that reproach? |
144850373 | And not, as feeling, throughout all parts diffus’d, That fhe might look at will through ev’ry pore? |
144850373 | And what care we whether it be a devil or any other creature that amufes us? |
144850373 | At one of their feafts, the Batch?) |
144850373 | At the firft onfet, Melanthus afked his adverfary, why he had, con¬ trary to the articles, brought a fecond into the field with him? |
144850373 | BREWERS-/&«; |
144850373 | BRooK- Zm. |
144850373 | Bee- G7? |
144850373 | BiETERRiE, an ancient town of the Tertofages in Gallia Narbonenfis; now Ae/ fe/ v, on the eaft bank of •? |
144850373 | Blair( James), an eminent divine, was born and Bln? |
144850373 | Blind people have infinitely more to fear from the levity and ignorance, than from the felfiihnefs and ill? |
144850373 | Blue/ q/ Z?. |
144850373 | Brow- Pi?/?, among builders, denotes a beam which goes acrofs a building. |
144850373 | Burgh- A/ w/;? |
144850373 | Burgh-5«/(? |
144850373 | But here this natural queftion will arife, Why have we not the hotteft weather when the earth is neareft the fun? |
144850373 | But how then fhall we believe that beafts came out of the hands of their Creator with qua¬ lities fo very ftrange? |
144850373 | But what crimes can hearts have committed by birth to be fubjeft to evils fo very cruel? |
144850373 | But where are thefe organs fituated? |
144850373 | Cajks By Cafh in part By Balance- account 126? |
144850373 | Could not this computing end have been gained by the fird pair of thermome- the alti- ters? |
144850373 | Does not this feem to indicate that the luminous matter that encompaffes it derives not its fplendour from any intenfity of heat? |
144850373 | Egypt,& c. This khalif proved a warlike and fuccefsful prince, recovered p}e ga{ned feveral advantages over the Karmatians, but lif aTmoc- wa? |
144850373 | Fixed ftar?. |
144850373 | For what is human exiftence, in its prefent ftate, if you deprive it of action and contemplation? |
144850373 | For what is there that a man may not be induced to forfeit, to fave his own life? |
144850373 | For what purpofe ihould wife nature then have furnifhed the drones with that large quantity of feminal liquor? |
144850373 | General Rules for//; |
144850373 | Have we not then a right to call the world to an account? |
144850373 | Having made this fuppofition, he defired to know what the afs would do? |
144850373 | He I35 ’ reigned in the fecond, or, as others fay, in the latt year? |
144850373 | He could not hope to remain long concealed at Tichfield: the queftion was, what meafure fliould next be embraced? |
144850373 | He di~ thy everlafting light? |
144850373 | He that Jhall come after?> ie ’ will baptize you ’ with the Holy Ghoft. |
144850373 | He then allied him how many acres the above field meafured? |
144850373 | He wa? |
144850373 | He was alfo ex-^fhid''khi- tremely fortunate in all his undertakings, tho? |
144850373 | He wrote feveral works, the prin-^ “ er? |
144850373 | Here Mary Magda- or conducing criminal intrigue?. |
144850373 | His adven- rpjje y0ung k;ng now entered upon a fcene of ad- wards? |
144850373 | How can we conceive, in effeft, that the walls of Babylon could have been 318 feet high, and 81 in thicknefs, in a compafs of near ten leagues? |
144850373 | How many relations in ecclefiaftical writers of Madonas, crucifixes, and wafers, bleeding? |
144850373 | If the Deity projects the planets in a right line, how can a created quality make them deviate from that line? |
144850373 | If we are to fuppofe the Deity to projedt them at all, why do we not fuppofe him to project them in a circular or elliptical direc¬ tion? |
144850373 | In November 1690, Mr de Beauval advertifed in his Journal s? |
144850373 | In his addrefs to this kind of men, he afks, whether they ftaid to be baptized after death? |
144850373 | In this conftru&ion it is fuppofed, that the angle under which the moon ’s difk is feen, during the wholt? |
144850373 | In x6?) |
144850373 | It is a native''£ r> ur?'' |
144850373 | It is at this time about four times nearer 76.? |
144850373 | It is bed when gathered in Augud or Sep- xLlx"? |
144850373 | It is famous for its falt- vvorks, Broom-7?#/>, in botany. |
144850373 | It may be afked in¬ deed, If fixed air is capable of fupplying this fpirit in fuch plenty, how comes it to be fo inftantaneoufly fatal when breathed? |
144850373 | It precedes in right afcenfion the northern in the girdle, or v Bayero? |
144850373 | J I''KlsriXO^ m''rwr''?/i e/ ei''a/ rbtut. |
144850373 | Jenghiz Khan, having taken poffefiion of Bokhara, entered on horfe- back into the great mofque, and aiked merrily if that was the fultan ’s palace? |
144850373 | Ninus, fays, “ To this Mars the Aflyri''ans ere&ed the ca?'' |
144850373 | Now what can this be owing to, if not to a repullive power in the fun, or his atmofphere? |
144850373 | Now why fhould we confine this repul¬ fion to the rays of light only? |
144850373 | O 4 49 3? |
144850373 | Or can God only projedt bodies in a right line as men can do? |
144850373 | Paid in part L 15 Ti? |
144850373 | Renatus Moreau procured a new edition of it at Paris ifii B R I[ 1396 U B R X Bridle, Jn 1622; and annexed to It a treatlfe entitled Dt? |
144850373 | Required the true time of New Moon in April 1764, New Stile? |
144850373 | Required the true time of New Moon in July, Old Stile, A. D. 2180? |
144850373 | Required the true time of New Moon in May, Old Stile, the year before Chrift 585? |
144850373 | See Architecture, n ° 75*? 6- BASHARIANS, a fedft of Mahometans, being a branch or fubdivifion of the Motazalites. |
144850373 | See Back-5ok. |
144850373 | Sir John Gram 8 S? |
144850373 | Sl Thus we have endeavoured to form an eftimate of the Apoftropf*? |
144850373 | So obvious, and fo eafy to be quench’d? |
144850373 | Sometimes they ufe new II pieces of linen cloth to make buckrams, but moft? lK!a''commonly old( beets and old pieces of fails. |
144850373 | Soon after this, however, the new adminiftration 44? |
144850373 | Spica, alternate fefiile flowers[/.. |
144850373 | TABLE V. Mean Lunation? |
144850373 | The colour of it I A,? |
144850373 | The data which they explore*''5? |
144850373 | The deteftation of tyranny fubjoins, “ But why do I dwell oti this place? |
144850373 | The earlieft notice we find of and grow fo fat? |
144850373 | The ftamina of feveral dry capfules, each containing a Angle cell, are in number from tw |
144850373 | The idolatrous Ifraelites, we are told,? nade Baal- berith their god, Judg. |
144850373 | The jury withdrew into a chamber where they palled the whole night; but next morning they returned l? |
144850373 | The moil remarkable were thofe globes jeflions r;100^ by hem, f °,that their? |
144850373 | The moon ’s W,, s, the m ° 01? |
144850373 | The nation had now become dif- 4C? |
144850373 | The next propofition was, In a bin 346 inches long, 255 inches wide, and 94 inches deep, how many gallons liquid meafure, and whatcom would it hold? |
144850373 | The true time of Full Moon in May 1762, Neoa Stile? |
144850373 | There are two forts of it; the red brafs, or bronze, and the yellow or gilt brafs: th? |
144850373 | They alked thofe who approached the fick, if they ever had the fame diftemper? |
144850373 | They are faid to have derived their name*? ee from Atlas king of Mauritania, who was a great a- frlca. |
144850373 | They boldly failed nor adverfity without a compenfation for it? |
144850373 | They have each their name; the hanger peror Charles V. ufed to fay, “ that Langey ’s pen had\tchoui''), the eater( c/ h? |
144850373 | They hoped to make gold; and what is bread in comparifon with gold? |
144850373 | They publicly aflced the queen ’s fervants happened that the fame wind which fent the Dutch to whither they had conveyed her? |
144850373 | Thofe who take the contrary fide of the qudlion, affirm that the difappearance of fome of the fixed ftars c? |
144850373 | To OfnahurgSy for 100 pieces, at 12 s L. 60 Ti? |
144850373 | To this fuccefs in the Weftern part Capture of of the world may be added the capture of the Spanifh th? |
144850373 | To what ufe fo large an apparatus of fecundating organs, fo well deferibed by Reaumur and Maraldi? |
144850373 | True time of new moon in? |
144850373 | What are we, then, to think of the horrible exceffes of miferies undergone by beafts? |
144850373 | What good can there be in a monkey ’s being fo very mifchievous, a dog fofull of envy, a cat fo malicious? |
144850373 | What inconceivable power muft not fuch a ftream of electric matter be attended with? |
144850373 | What keeps it alive in the firft cafe? |
144850373 | What monfters are thefe in a world originally created for order and juftice to reign in? |
144850373 | What more could it do, pray, were it really to be repelled? |
144850373 | What muft be done? |
144850373 | What party are we to take? |
144850373 | What, then, is this fubftance? |
144850373 | When there are any force? |
144850373 | Where, therefore, can he find a more co¬ pious, intimate, permanent, and efficacious fource of comfort than in religion? |
144850373 | Whether you fhall trufl the returning zeal of your native fubjeils, or rely on a foreign power? |
144850373 | Which example, of dif- countenancing thefe judicial combats, was imitated a- bout a century afterwards in France, by a? |
144850373 | Which( fays he) of all Mr Boyle ’s writings( hall I recommend? |
144850373 | Who then can deny that vegetables are poftefied of living and felf- moving powers? |
144850373 | _ But by what means is it fo? |
144850373 | and how he was cured? |
144850373 | as they are material, may not other matter brought near his body be affccled in the fame manner? |
144850373 | di//; t? |
144850373 | f Hi/?, of Mr Whittaker f fuppofes, that when the Britons de- Mancbejier. |
144850373 | fible for him to go through fo much fatigue? |
144850373 | had fo entirely fupprefied that impetuous and ungo- 06''U5 ‘ vernable pafEon? |
144850373 | if they knew any one who had had i it? |
144850373 | in the year 1596, we have the firft account of the wonderful ftar in Collo Ceti, feen by David Fabricius on the third of Auguft, y?. |
144850373 | not be fo now, as well as then? |
144850373 | phenomenon, or matter of “/rfC?. ” p. 335. |
144850373 | s o''"Therefore from---3000 Subtract the fun ’s longitude or place o 12 10 12 At the mean time of new moon in-? |
144850373 | t? |
144850373 | that they previoufly lived? |
144850373 | thou great Word, Let there be light, and light was over all; Why am I thus bereav’d thy primp decree? |
144850373 | time as in harveft? |
144850373 | tl efe principles is, What is the propereft liquor for sfi fteeping cloth? |
144850373 | writ go out for the chufing or returning any member without the warrant of the houfe. ”? |
144850373 | “ Do we not fee( fays he) the ftigma of almoft every hermaphrodite flower covered over with the pollen or impregnating fubftance? |
144850373 | “ How blind is man to future things? |
144850373 | “ Now what muft be the effe& of fo vaft a body as our atmofphere, made ftrongly ele&rical, when it happens to approach any other body? |
144850373 | “ The queftion, Sir,( faid he), is, Whether you fhall flay in England, or fly to France? |
144850373 | “ To what are all thefe effe&s owing? |
144850373 | “ Why not as far as the moon? |
144850374 | !, that prince ftruck him to the ground with his fword, faying, Nc feats tu pas qu''anx echecs on tie prendpas le roy? |
144850374 | % s. Flo/ ph o? |
144850374 | &? «/rf- CHRisTiNA, one of the Marquesas 1/ lands. |
144850374 | (~ Acids Volatile alkali l.^ Calc, earths, or me- Fixe(j air>( talhc lubltances~ Vitriolic or marine a-''cids''Alkalies or earths"Lead? |
144850374 | 102? eace con- tluded. |
144850374 | 11 Knave J 12 Queen clubs Eight? |
144850374 | 29 30 25 26 21 22 I? |
144850374 | 42? |
144850374 | 5 If again you interrogate them how thofe books, The nature which they call Scripture, are authenticated? |
144850374 | 5. is to EKF as EF? |
144850374 | 6. is to ZG? |
144850374 | 6.; then by the pro¬ perty of the curve the redtangle KXE is to SX? |
144850374 | 6? |
144850374 | 7.87 9.28 N.]? ■ The time that one candle lafted was taken from an.average of feveral trials in each fize. |
144850374 | 70 Is mortally wounded?" |
144850374 | 71] COM And as the weight fliould be removed to the great- Compafs eft diftance from the centre of motion, a circle of^( r? |
144850374 | ; but GC is equal to GE, which is equal to MB; therefore GM? |
144850374 | ; that is, as GX? |
144850374 | ? |
144850374 | ? ns gree, in which ftate it was perfectly invifible and JjJ”116 a''elaftiiij%s air, it was then able to feparate the nitrous acid from an alkali. |
144850374 | ?. |
144850374 | ?.aV weather proves warm and dry, a very moderate wa¬ tering will now and then be neceffary, and the plants will rife in fix or eight weeks. |
144850374 | ?> f> b Ij charadters of fimple triple time, the meafure of which is equal to three femibreves, or to three minims. |
144850374 | APolyjlHe Colohm)?., is that whofe numbers of columns is too great to be taken in by the eye at a fingle view. |
144850374 | After having thus examined into the reafon of the thing, let us next afk, What was the condition of this country before we had any plantations? |
144850374 | After this- other forts, but fpreads near the ground; the leaves has been properly mixed and wrought, it flrould be? |
144850374 | And are not thefe itories matched by thofe of Calypfo and Circe, the enchantrefles of the Greek Poet? |
144850374 | And do we for that reject their authority? |
144850374 | And does not one fee, on the inftant, what refpeCt and dependence this privilege would draw uoon them? |
144850374 | And what are the Grecian Bacchus, Hercules and The.feus, hut knights- errant, the exaft counterparts of Sir Launce- lot, and Amadis de Gaul? |
144850374 | Another? nethod. |
144850374 | As to the power of human punilhment, or the right of the temporal legiflator to infliift difcretionary i BAifty?. |
144850374 | Atque ipfes libeat penetrate Britannos? |
144850374 | Bafil 1 C44, Lond • Q- A r-? |
144850374 | Be buried among kings, and with more than regal folemnity? |
144850374 | Be feared and courted by all princes, and adopted a brother to the gods of the earth? |
144850374 | Brave and generous( bn, why do you not bind your father ’s hands, that when Caefar comes, he may find me un¬ able to defend inyfelf? |
144850374 | But after one month ’s growth, I remarked that n ° r. was the beft; n ° 2. the next; n? |
144850374 | But after¬ ward?*. |
144850374 | But being then in a lethargic fit, he anfwered from the purpole; upon which he was again afked whether he did not name his eldeft fon Richard? |
144850374 | But how was this to be ef¬ fected? |
144850374 | But the negroes replied, that? |
144850374 | But whence had they the fpicery? |
144850374 | But who can fay what is there precifely meant by the word day? |
144850374 | But who knows what means Providence may have employed to produce thefe appearances? |
144850374 | But, what has become of the immenfe quantity of heat and light emitted from the fun fince the creation of the world? |
144850374 | By his valour and eloquence he foon of fupreme power? |
144850374 | C ATKA Bin CTT S, v/f)//////(>// S/ t''frrT? |
144850374 | C Tin ‘ £ Silver C Copper''? |
144850374 | CAL[ 15? |
144850374 | CHONDROPTERYG1I, in ichthyology, a term formerly applied to the order of filhes now called amphibia? iantes by Linnaeus. |
144850374 | CON the efteem of others, and, which of afi i? |
144850374 | Caftration is fometimes found neceflary in chirur- gical cafes, as in a farcocele and cancer of the te- fticle?. |
144850374 | Can competition among buyers poffibly take place, when the provifion made is more than fufficient to fupply the quantity demanded? |
144850374 | Can not the true God be fuppofed to have performed thofe miracles which Pagan hiftorians have attributed to their falfe divini¬ ties? |
144850374 | Catch- To/?,( quafi one that catches by the pole,) a term ufed, by way of reproach, for the bailiff ’s fol¬ lower or affiftant. |
144850374 | Cato raifing himfelf, and looking fiercely at them, “ How long is.it, faid he, fince 1 have loft my fenfes, and my fon is become my keeper? |
144850374 | Ceb.w? |
144850374 | CherrY-7Vi?, in botany. |
144850374 | CherrY-7Vi?, in botany. |
144850374 | Com¬ mand a mutinous army by means of feditious and fac¬ tious officers? |
144850374 | Congi) b r 1 1 Congreg?. |
144850374 | Conllrudl a box AB, of about a foot long, eight H, Appear^ inches wide, and fix high; or what other dimen- fnce^? |
144850374 | Corporations have a capacity to purchafe lands for BLci?. |
144850374 | CouNTER- Afi «, in war, a well and gallery drove and funk till it meet the enemy ’s mine to prevent its effect. |
144850374 | Counter-/W/ |
144850374 | Cover all tftefe temerities under a feeming obedience to a par¬ liament, in whofe fervice he pretended to be retain¬ ed? |
144850374 | CuNEivoRM- i?o «(?, in anatomy, the feventh bone of the cranium, called alfo os bajilare, and os fphsnoi- des. |
144850374 | Die pofletTed of peace at home, and triumph abroad? |
144850374 | Do you imagine that without a fword I can not end my life? |
144850374 | Each of thefe lines increa- fing in breadth towards its end, appears fomewhat club- headed(, r, e). |
144850374 | Emporium The Carthaginian general having landed his for- and Selinus ces? |
144850374 | Fo? |
144850374 | For is it found upon far¬ ther experience, that capital puniftiments are more effetftual? |
144850374 | For us 1 to depidt it, would be a tad? |
144850374 | For what are Homer ’s Lteftrigons and Cy¬ clops, but bands of lawlefs favages, with each of them a giant of enormous fize at their head? |
144850374 | For what is death- to that mind which confiders eternity as the carreer of its exigence? |
144850374 | From the T. „ r “ If after the lapfe of 18 centuries, the truth may pulo/ b? |
144850374 | G. Tolofanus derives it from the Hebrew,/r/ W/1, vallavit et? nat mortuus; whence check and check- mate. |
144850374 | Hath Bolingbroke depos’d Thine intelleid? |
144850374 | Hath he been in thy heart? |
144850374 | Hi/?, of Vi- fion, Vol. |
144850374 | His other* Deled?. |
144850374 | His piece on gravity, entitled Trait? |
144850374 | How difficult is it to afeertain the years of the judges of the Jewifh nation, in the Bible? |
144850374 | How inconceivably numerous then muft the circulations in the whole human body be? |
144850374 | How many tricks, lefs artful than this, have pafled in former times for forcery; and pafs at this time, in fome countries, for apparitions? |
144850374 | I*-0"? |
144850374 | I? |
144850374 | IS NOTHING CERTAIN? |
144850374 | If this was the cafe, why is not the right ventricle three times as large and Itrong as the left? |
144850374 | Is not infinite goodnefs equally confpicuous in relieving mifery as in diffufing happinefs? |
144850374 | Is the language of every nation intuitive, or were they dictated by exi¬ gences, and eftablilhed by convention? |
144850374 | It had the names of Durovernum and Darvemam given it by the Romans, and Durober? |
144850374 | It is abforbed by terreftrial bodies, we know;, but what becomes of it afterwards? |
144850374 | It is called by ancient hifto- r- ies rians the Libya?! |
144850374 | It? |
144850374 | Jda urt jvo tumm* wa? |
144850374 | K F, a fub¬ terraneous paffage for water from the lock, to the infe¬ rior Tmw<* ’///? |
144850374 | Macrobius C H A[ 1776] C H A Champagne Macrobius fliews that Hammon was the fun; and the N horns, with which he was reprefented, denoted his try? |
144850374 | Muft we pay no regard to the writings of Livy, becaufe his hiftory contains many fabulous re¬ lations? |
144850374 | On the contrary, the chord of the leffer fixth major is much more pleafing and cheerful than that of the falfe fifth? |
144850374 | On the other hand, can competition take place among the fellers, when the quantity demanded exceeds the total provifion made for it? |
144850374 | Or how came Arabia to be fo famous in ancient times for fpices? |
144850374 | Or whence proceeded that miftake of many great authors of antiquity, that fpices actually grew there? |
144850374 | Over- run each corner of the three nations, and fubdue with equal facility both the riches of the fouth, and the poverty of the north? |
144850374 | Reduce to fubjedtion a warlike and dif- — •• — — contented nation by means of a mutinous army? |
144850374 | Ret? |
144850374 | See Astronomy, h? |
144850374 | See Steam- jEV^//;?. |
144850374 | Serve all parties patiently for a while, and afterwards command them viCtorioully at laft? |
144850374 | She died in 174?, II aged 58. |
144850374 | Sup- “ pofe the queftion to be, Is nothing certain? |
144850374 | Suppole the queftion to be, IVbat is each 11 Briton''s boa]}? |
144850374 | That he fliould have the power and boldnefs to put his prince and mafter to an open and.infamous death? |
144850374 | The boring rods are made of iron from.3 to-? |
144850374 | The coals of different fubftances are alfo ufed as pigments; hepce the bone- black, ivory- black, ire?, of the( hops. |
144850374 | The copper mud be difperfed through the compolition of calamine and coal; and the whol? |
144850374 | The ftola- tus, with 143 icuta and 76 fcutella?, is a native of Afia; and is of a greyilh colour, with two white fillets. |
144850374 | The ftrudiure of the brain differing but very little in all quodrupeds, it will be needlefs to examine it in I? |
144850374 | The laws of chemical inquiries at leaft demand, that we do not look upon them any otherwife, till we ar? |
144850374 | The royal African company was firft erected in the year 1661, with an exclufive privilege to trade from cape Blanc, on the coaft of Africa, in 20? |
144850374 | The tem- according to Prudentius, at this time converted the? • « m A- fenate and people from idolatry to Chriftianity. |
144850374 | The valt treafures of their try fubdu? |
144850374 | The word is chiefly ufed in criminal matters? |
144850374 | There are five^Medkirt? |
144850374 | They have alfo wine, and plenty of all fucculent upward, fending out many irregular branches, forts of eatable?. |
144850374 | This general diflolution the Stoics call exB- vpaw?, eepyrofis. |
144850374 | This laft is called kermes? niiieral. |
144850374 | This matrafs is to be placed in a crucible, or other earthen veffel, large enough to contain the belly of th «? |
144850374 | This precipitate ha? |
144850374 | Thus Ti- tius and his brother are related; why? |
144850374 | To fet cus of a concave mirror being reflected in parallel fire to? |
144850374 | Trade is come to a flop: what then becomes of all the hands which were formerly employed in fupplying the foreign de¬ mands? |
144850374 | Trample too upon that parliament in their turn, and fcornfully expel them as foon as they gave him ground of cliiratisfaClion? |
144850374 | Two of the oppofite fide.? |
144850374 | Very true; but is it not re¬ futed in going down, both by the form of the chim¬ ney and other evident caufes, fo that it muft return again? |
144850374 | Was the vaft territory of all the Ruflias worfe regulated under the late emprefs Elizabeth, than under her more fanguinary predeceflbrs? |
144850374 | What Creflid is, what Pandar, and what we? |
144850374 | What are the frowns of for¬ tune to him who claims an eternal world as his inhe¬ ritance? |
144850374 | What darknefs is fpread over the fucceffion of the kings of Judah and Ifrael? |
144850374 | What our con¬ dition has been fince? |
144850374 | What then are the confequences of this new com¬ merce to our merchants, who have left their homes in queft of gain abroad? |
144850374 | What, is my Richard both in fliape and mind Transform’d and weak? |
144850374 | When he was reader in the abbey- church at Bath, he took occafion, in a 30th of January fer- mon, 1714? |
144850374 | Where ’s the necelfity of that, Mr Bayes? |
144850374 | Who can doubt, for example, of the truth of the fadts re¬ lated by admiral Anfon, in the hiftory of his voyage round the world? |
144850374 | Who does not feel how much more vocal and fonorous the fifth appears when compared with the fourth? |
144850374 | Why is a period fo vaft, obliterated fo entirely as to efcape the retro- fpeit of hiftory, of tradition, and even of fable itfelf? |
144850374 | Y- C^( a boa? |
144850374 | Yet where is there a perfon to be found, that can boaft of his having be¬ come mafter of its do&rine in a year? |
144850374 | abilities to execute, fo great a defign as the ftibverting one of the molt ancient as well as belt edtablilhed monarchies in the world? |
144850374 | added to GM?, asXE? |
144850374 | added to GM?, asXE? |
144850374 | as GE? |
144850374 | becaufe both are derived from one father: Titius and his firft cou- fin are related; why? |
144850374 | genteus; and exchanging ufually for 25 attic drachms of filver; in j our money — — J According to our proportion of? |
144850374 | how far they ex¬ tended? |
144850374 | in and about London; to fee if their drug?,< trc. |
144850374 | is equal to BM?—CM? |
144850374 | is it becaufe 1 look like a man? ”_ H But though fhe ridiculed the manners of the French Chriftmas. |
144850374 | is to EXK as MN? |
144850374 | lefs civilized, lefs focial, lels fecure? |
144850374 | merce to the not- trading nation, and they infenfibly What are the firll confequences of this revolution? |
144850374 | my years to Jive? |
144850374 | nians, foppofing themfelves to have fallen under the mufe? |
144850374 | of his mouth? |
144850374 | or EP? |
144850374 | or can you bring any reafon to prove, that it is not bale and unworthy of Cato to beg his fafety of an enemy? |
144850374 | or does their running away, at flamping hard on the ground or crying loud, depend upon fome other kind of fenfation? |
144850374 | potuijti relinquere folam Crude Its? |
144850374 | repreleut? |
144850374 | that it''moderates alimentary fermentation, and is? • I27-] powerfully fedative. |
144850374 | that numerous and ftrongly allied family? |
144850374 | the pride, luxury, and avarice o? |
144850374 | to GH?. |
144850374 | to MN?. |
144850374 | to SX? |
144850374 | toGM? |
144850374 | who was at that time in the prime of youth? |
144850374 | with a loaf? |
144850374 | with what loud applaufe Didft thou beat heav’n with bleffing Bolingbroke Before he was what thou would’ft have him be? |
144850374 | — — Tune ilia fcnsclee Sera me requies? |
144850374 | “ Did not Oflian hear a voice; or is it the found “ of days that are no more? |
144850374 | “ Doft thou not know, that at chefs the king is never taken? |
144850370 | ! l Artist,( drtifta), in an academical fenfe, denotes Amle? |
144850370 | ( m) The lambdoidal future is fometimes very irregular; being compofed of many fmall futures, which furround fo many tittle bones called''^? |
144850370 | * ■''M.rg ■ 1965# PREFACE. |
144850370 | *? |
144850370 | .-/t? |
144850370 | /?, The manfuetus, or tame- fwan. |
144850370 | 1 o s. confitting of raifins at 4 d. per ft. and almonds at 6 d. how many pounds of al¬ monds were in the mixture? |
144850370 | 1* 1 at<\ X IB unit OfleTmu? |
144850370 | 1*''t without all this formality of parliament? |
144850370 | 125 45 1: 1.05: 1.1025: 1.157625: 1.21550625? |
144850370 | 1647, Anthropophagi,( of* »*? |
144850370 | 18)144(8''2d, If a certain number of men confume 8 bolls ia 28 days, how many will they confume in 56 days? |
144850370 | 3? |
144850370 | 4. reprefent? |
144850370 | , Mufculus pe&ineus cut from its origin, f, Short head of the triceps addudlor femoris cut. |
144850370 | >? •''count of the fmallnefs of their fize. |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? |
144850370 | ? 8 Plate XXXVIII. |
144850370 | ? g In regular archite&ure, no other form of pediments Forms, See. |
144850370 | ? n perpetual parfons of the church; and muft fue and be ftars. |
144850370 | ?/''7n< n?rt/ Mi/ a. |
144850370 | A being 60, and B 25 years of age? |
144850370 | A gentleman gives 40 years purchafe for.an eftate: What intereft has he for his money? |
144850370 | A gentleman is willing to purchafe an e- ftate, provided he can have per cent, for his money: How many years purchafe may he offer? |
144850370 | A grocer would mix fugars, at 5 d. 7 d. and 10 d. per ft. fo as to fell the mixture or compound at 8 d. per ft: What quantity of each muft he take? |
144850370 | A moidore= L.i 7 — A half moidore — — 13 6 A quarter moidore — — 69 A double Joannes= 3 12 — A Joannes= 1 16 — A half ditto= — 18 —? |
144850370 | A provincial fynod was held at St Andrews h? |
144850370 | ACOLYTHIA, in the Greek church, denotes the office or order of divine fervice; or? |
144850370 | ADR[ 88] ADR fume be fa!d of the idol- woi''fhip of the heathens? |
144850370 | ANT ed, with a ravenous appetite; and that they affirmed its ticular management further than being kept free from Amlrypo? |
144850370 | Absolute.SAyr? |
144850370 | Again, put the queftion, If one ftring be but half the length of the other, and be ftruck, how will the vibrations be? |
144850370 | Alarm- jPc/?, or A\,AKm- place, the ground for draw¬ ing up each regiment in cafe of an alarm. |
144850370 | Alban re¬ plied, “ To what purpofe do you inquire of my fa¬ mily? |
144850370 | An agate is mentioned by Kir- tins, a^oitb?, and Achates, from a river in Sicily, on the cher*, on which was the reprefentation of a heroine* Ephem. |
144850370 | An arithmetical proportion is agreeable in num- bers; but have we from this any reafon to conclude, that it muft alfo be agreeable in quantity? |
144850370 | An eftate of 180 1. yearly rent is bought for 4000.: What rate of intereft has the purchafer for his money? |
144850370 | And, after all, what was the fage advice that required fuch a preface? |
144850370 | Anterior part of thi Lower edge of the I Bafis of the n? |
144850370 | Argent of itfelf is ufed in heraldry to fig- nify purity, innocence,''beauty, and gentlenefs; and? |
144850370 | At any rate, was Diomedes fo little known, as to make it proper to fufpend the a&ion at fo critical a jundlure, for a genealogical hiftory? |
144850370 | B? |
144850370 | Being alked, what things were moft proper for children to be inftrutfted in? |
144850370 | Being brought before the governor, he afked him why he committed fuch ravages and depredations in the Chri- ftian territories? |
144850370 | But it is not only in acid matters that? |
144850370 | But it maybe afked, why eels and water- fnakes are capable of living longer in the air than the other kinds of fifti? |
144850370 | But what if ridges be already formed, that are either crooked or too high? |
144850370 | Butter ought by all means to be denied them-? |
144850370 | Date locum domino? neo, i. e. Make room or way for my mafter. |
144850370 | Doth not a foil fo meliorated draw near to one perpetually fertile? |
144850370 | Equation?, term tranfpofed. |
144850370 | For example, let the intereft due on the following account be required to 31st July, at 4 per cent? |
144850370 | Great differences had arifen between the DutchandEng- lifli colonifts in this part of the world? |
144850370 | He introdu- In that paffage there are frequent repetitions; not ced into his native tongue a fweetnefs, a grace, a ma- 4 U 2 jefty, ART[? |
144850370 | He was immediately treated with the higheft refpeCt by the Najaihi, or king of Ethio¬ pia? |
144850370 | Hence Attian Years, an sera commencing from the battle of Aftium? |
144850370 | Horace mentions this faft in his third fatire of the fecond book: Quid fimile ifti Grascus Ariftippus? |
144850370 | How did you commit the faft? |
144850370 | How is this provided for? |
144850370 | How much fliould each have? |
144850370 | How widely have the fentiments of mankind differ¬ ed as to the poflxbility and impoflibility of annihila¬ tion? |
144850370 | IJ3"rfe/ Tmsfai! ■/? |
144850370 | If 3 yards coft 15 s. 9 d. what will 7 yards coft, at the fame rate? |
144850370 | If 30 horfes plough 12 acres, how many will 42 plough in the fame time? |
144850370 | If he only regulates it, why does he not regulate the heat equally in fimilar parallels of northern or fouthern latitude? |
144850370 | If it be under ten, 121? |
144850370 | If too men make 3 miles of road in 27 days, in how many days will 150 men make 5 miles? |
144850370 | Immediately af¬ ter his eledlion, he wrote to A1 Walid, governor of Me-? |
144850370 | In like manner, if 4X—2=8, then, by tranfpofition, 4*= i? |
144850370 | In like manner, is it the pure elementary part of water, which nourilhes them? |
144850370 | In the cavity is This, though greatly inferior to th? |
144850370 | In the fecond, the fuppofition is, that 40 horfes are maintained on hay at 5 d. and the demand, ho< w many ‘ will he maintained on hay at 8 d? |
144850370 | In the firft, the fuppofition is, that$ 0 horfes plough 12 acres, and the demand, hom many 42 ‘ will plough? |
144850370 | In this fenfe, ACC[ 39] ACC fcnfe, accent is fynonymous with the Greek rova? |
144850370 | In this place there lived a prieft fo Governor0f eminent for his fan&ity, that the neighbouring people Tnp? |
144850370 | Is it then the aqueous, the earthy, the acid, or the phlogiftic part of the air, which nourilhes plants? |
144850370 | Ist-] Divide.37845 by^ 5)-37845(-6Si21 33333? |
144850370 | It is a myftical word, compofed of the Greek numerals*,/?, g, «, 5, «, which together make up the number CCCLXV. |
144850370 | It is called by the Greeks, Afyia? |
144850370 | It is controverted be¬ tween the two cities, which is to be reputed the more 1? |
144850370 | J See Anata- ABSORUS, Apsorus, Absyrtis, Absyrtides, mJ>110 s6? |
144850370 | Low often 8 is contained in 19? |
144850370 | Lumbar a, Thefe five vertebrae differ only from thofe of the? erte rx. |
144850370 | Minuend 173694 738641 Subtrahend 21453 379235 Remainder 152241 359406 To prove fubtra&ion, add the fubtrahend and re¬ mainder together? |
144850370 | Nehemiah Grew, in his anatomy of plants, applies this term to a pulpy fubftance in certain fruits,(?. |
144850370 | No more a pleafxng cheerful gueft? |
144850370 | No wonder it had been fo long concealed; for who would have thought of looking for the fummum bomm, where others have placed the lum of mifery? |
144850370 | Or what makes one deep and the other Ihrill? |
144850370 | Required the intereft and balance due on the 11th November 1775? |
144850370 | Sending therefore for fome of the principal of them, he afked them what kind of treatment they expe&ed from him, now he had con¬ quered them? |
144850370 | She was attended by a guard of 5000 men; befides which prophet? |
144850370 | Such foils actu¬ ally exift; and why( hould it be thought, that imita¬ tion here is above the reach of art? |
144850370 | Terah, at his return, aflced whence came all this havock? |
144850370 | That long haft warm’d my tender breaft, Muft thou no more this frame infpire? |
144850370 | The ambo was afcended by fteps? |
144850370 | The attempt may fugged proper experiments: it may open new views: and if we fail in equalling nature, may we not, however, hope to approach it? |
144850370 | The cannabina, or ftirubby p ALT[ 273] ALT-Althxa flirubby marftimallow, is a native of Hungary and If- Altfni? |
144850370 | The faid prelate propofesit as a que:''‘ on, whether fuf- Annihii fcring eternal torments beagreateri i tuannotexifting? |
144850370 | The fame fubftance is[ 472 1 Anfpach li? |
144850370 | The fame number of mea 8 will confume 16 bolls in 56 days? |
144850370 | The firft, Are you guilty of this fail? |
144850370 | The governor having aiked him of what family he was? |
144850370 | The height of the Doric column, including its ca¬ pital I’liUcXXVI^£\ Tlate^X^TO:? |
144850370 | The king propofed aloud this queftion, Whether he might not take his fubje&s money when he needed it, wlftiont all this formality of parliament? |
144850370 | The name is fuppofed to have been derived from hence, that Handing ready to give the ftroke he afked Agon''? |
144850370 | The officer next in power to the dey is the aga of^2? |
144850370 | The orientalis, or eaftern buglofs, is a native of the Levant? |
144850370 | The pro- tens shoufe*j portions; 2? |
144850370 | The pyramidales are more minute papilla?, of a conical fhape, very numerous on the apex and borders of the tongue. |
144850370 | The women are very amorous? |
144850370 | The word is Greek? |
144850370 | The word is Latin, formed from ad to, and/for |
144850370 | The word itfelf is compounded of two Greek radical words; avJop, in ge¬ nitive avJfoc, a male; and? vv », a female. |
144850370 | The yearly rent of a fmall eftate is 401.: What is it worth in ready money, computing intereft at 3- 1-per cent.? |
144850370 | The/fry? |
144850370 | This axis is a fquare piece of Heel, on which comes the fquare hole of the Air- pipe?, hammer H, fig. |
144850370 | This he did; and, after a moft obftinate difpute which lafted feveral days, drove them into th? |
144850370 | This leads to a queftion, Whether the fituation, where there happens to be no choice, ought, in any meafure, to regulate the form of the edifice? |
144850370 | This private procefs, for the puMlhment of public crimes, had probably its original in thofe times, when a? |
144850370 | This tur nic every where exactly embraces the papilla?, and is exceedingly foft and pulpy from the perpetual warmth and moifture of the parts. |
144850370 | Thus, it may be aflced, if 18 men con- fume 6 bolls corn in 40 days, how much will 24 me* confume in 56 days? |
144850370 | To one who allied him what his fon would be the bet¬ ter for being a fcholar? |
144850370 | To what dark undilcover’d Ihore? |
144850370 | To what then are thofe antipathies, of which we have heard fo much, reducible? |
144850370 | Upon this principle alfo it is that the fpeaking trum- 2? |
144850370 | We had not gone 20 yards in this cavity, when we loft all fight of day- light: but our guides going before us with ANT j Amiparo?. |
144850370 | What adminiftration was not to be expected from a tribunal fo well compofed? |
144850370 | What bet¬ ter can an animal do for its welfare? |
144850370 | What follows? |
144850370 | What is it that produces the difference of tone in two elaftic founding bells or firings? |
144850370 | What is the value of 1001. annuity for the joint lives of two perfons, of the age of 30 years each, reckoning intereft at 4per cent.? |
144850370 | What is the value of of 7463 yards, at 4s? |
144850370 | What is the- doff on 28 C. 2 q.? |
144850370 | What man now- a- days is heard in our temples to make a vow for the attainment of eloquence, or for the difcovery of the fountain of true philofophy? |
144850370 | When Dionyfius allied, Why philofophers haunted the gates of A R I[ 647 J A R I ■ Ariflippn?, 0f nch men, but not rich men thofe of philofophers? |
144850370 | When Dionyfius allied, Why philofophers haunted the gates of A R I[ 647 J A R I ■ Ariflippn?, 0f nch men, but not rich men thofe of philofophers? |
144850370 | When air is to be poured from a wide- necked, into a very narrow- necked veffel, a glafs funnel |
144850370 | Where is the right path-of wif- dom? |
144850370 | Where now is the art of reafoning l Where aftronomy? |
144850370 | Whither, ah whither art thou flying? |
144850370 | Who in re¬ ply allied him, How he came to have fo little? |
144850370 | Who knows, but that one copu¬ lation might ferve for feveral generations? |
144850370 | Who were your accomplices? |
144850370 | Why db they not confider, that corn Handing dries in half a day when, in, a clofe( heaf, the weather muft be favourable if it dry in a month? |
144850370 | Why haft thou “ then broken down her hedges, fo that all that pafs “ do pluck her? |
144850370 | Why then does every individual of mankind conclude that his neighbour has the fame fenfations with himfelf? |
144850370 | Will any one pretend to call by the name of an¬ tipathy, thofe real, innate, and inconteftable averfions which prevail between fheep and wolves? |
144850370 | Z z U, 36? |
144850370 | ^ y?. |
144850370 | a, The fenfe of feeling is perhaps feated in all parts of the body, but is commonly faid to be confined to the nervous papilla? |
144850370 | compound intereft? |
144850370 | fhall I ftrike? |
144850370 | ies- Thus, if it be demanded, what chance a perfon of 40 years has to live feven years longer? |
144850370 | lures 475 and 589? |
144850370 | on all the payments then in arrear? |
144850370 | or A gone? |
144850370 | or does it contribute to their growth only by the heterogeneous fubftances which it contains? |
144850370 | our Saviour,^jiid eji veritas? |
144850370 | per boll? |
144850370 | propofals of an accommodation; and having obtained Portuguefe.? |
144850370 | the inner furface of the noftrils, the lamella? |
144850370 | the one.number,, yxz the other, 220—y 4 j=38x 4+ 38 i? |
144850370 | to a decimal of a ton? |
144850370 | unto the favage ftate? |
144850370 | what veneration was not due to men of fuch rare talents and virtue? |
144850370 | which being obferved by the philofopher, he alked A- riftippus, How he came to have fo much? |
144850370 | wliy? |
144850370 | ®?^^ by the beating of different hammers upon the fmith ’s cord;ng ato anvil. |
144850370 | ° boo? |
144850370 | ’ Active Principles, in chemiftry, fuch as are fuppofed? |
144850370 | ’ Sav/ ra*/6nrf7 t? |
144850370 | “ Do you make a wonder( faid Apuleius, in his defence) that a woman ffiould marry again, after ha¬ ving lived a widow 13 years? |
144850370 | “ Would to God( fays he) that his do&rine was as holy as his life is ftridf: would you know what fort of man this is? |
144850370 | •I''his latter cir- cumftance their name imports; the word being com¬ pounded of the Greek locuf, and? «/= « to eat. |
144850370 | ■''? |
144850375 | ), by means of which the funnel is kept clofe to the mouth of the phial? |
144850375 | *.Se? |
144850375 | .The E C C[ 2605] E C C Ebony They held the fame errors with the Nazarenes, ti¬ ll nited the ceremonies of the Mofaic inftitution with the 2?'' |
144850375 | 1 — TUo 8 12? |
144850375 | 1/?, To rife or defeend by a third or by a fixth. |
144850375 | 2681 that fide of it that is towards the ball A; at the fame Expe- time, the negatively ele£Irified ball A remains without nme“11?'' |
144850375 | : How much money muft be paid at Edinburgh for the bill? |
144850375 | ; and was buried in the parifh- church of Ebburton, where a monument was eredted to his me? |
144850375 | ; o.? |
144850375 | = 7 florin=: rixdollar r= rixdollar= 6 1 3 4 t 5 4? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ? |
144850375 | ?.-Month, the month wherein deer begin to fawn, during which it is unlawful to hunt in the fo- red. |
144850375 | ?//, a long flender rod or wand, to which the line is faftened,. |
144850375 | ?> as to form foft quagmires interfperfed through Plate XCY. |
144850375 | A Brazil diamond, fine? |
144850375 | A Figure, which, among related objefis, extend? |
144850375 | A learned commentary q? |
144850375 | A/£• |
144850375 | And how is glafs known to be impermeable? |
144850375 | And the fame author affures us, he has feen like, but for want of fuch an attraftion? |
144850375 | Are animal filaments tubular, and the colouring atoms received within them? |
144850375 | Are vegetable filaments folid, and the colour depofited on the furface? |
144850375 | As if he had faid, “ Do not deprive me of the benefits of nature, and I leave to you thofe of fortune. ” Th? |
144850375 | But hi? |
144850375 | But how do we know that one has too much and the other too little eledtricity? |
144850375 | But how is this known to be the cafe? |
144850375 | But if, whilft it is pofitive, its eledricity is taken off, then on being elevated, it appears ftrongly ■ negative? |
144850375 | But the jury very feldom find the flight: forfeiture being looked upon, fince the vaft increafe of perfonal pro? |
144850375 | But what are thefe rules? |
144850375 | But where does his ferutiny terminate? |
144850375 | But, if the fur- face of the ground is level or nearly fo, as between A^‘2- and B, and the fprings break out in feveral places, S''? |
144850375 | By what means were thefe ftrata origi¬ nally depofited, the fiffures and chafms made,& c.? |
144850375 | By what miracle was the little ark preferved amidft the tumult of thofe impetuous waves which muft have rufhed in from all quarters? |
144850375 | Can we fuppofe that fifti gives occalion to fuch a coagulnm as runnet? |
144850375 | Can you be furprifed that I endea¬ voured to preferve them? |
144850375 | Chufing(?/"Dogs. |
144850375 | Could a flroke from an angry woman tinge the honour of a gallant foldier? |
144850375 | DAMASKEENING, or Damasking, the art os? |
144850375 | DAUGHTER,///, a female child. |
144850375 | Damalks fliould be of dreffed filk, both in warp and woof; and, in France, half an ell in breadth? |
144850375 | Difpenfaries have alfo been eila? |
144850375 | Ditto, a very large red? |
144850375 | Ditto, fine bright coat 9,560 c. An Eaft India diamond,? |
144850375 | Ditto, fine water, rough? |
144850375 | Ditto, very bad water,? |
144850375 | Ditto, very deep green? |
144850375 | Ditto, very fine water,? |
144850375 | Ditto, very foft, good? |
144850375 | Dragon’s- S/*?!? |
144850375 | Dragon’s- S/*?!? |
144850375 | Englilh diphthongs, with regard to the eye and ear, are/, au, ea, es, oi, 00, ou. |
144850375 | Fifl? |
144850375 | Fishing-/? |
144850375 | Flemifh per crown; what muft be the rate of exchange between London and Amfterdam, in order to be on a par with the other two? |
144850375 | Flemifh? |
144850375 | Flow are we to account for this figure, which we* fee lies in the thought, and to what principle{ hall we refer it? |
144850375 | For this he offers the following diredfion? |
144850375 | For where in the mean time fhould the fir A words hang and be concealed; or how, after fuch a paufe, be revived, and animated again into motion? |
144850375 | Fuller( Dr Thomas), a learned Englifh divine? |
144850375 | Gurth> 1 j Z 2; tit? |
144850375 | Have poets a privilege to alter the nature of things, and at pleafure to bellow attributes upon a fubjedl to which they do not belong? |
144850375 | Have they any foundation in nature, or are they merely arbitrary? |
144850375 | Having forced open the doors, the foremoft of the af- faflins ruftied into his apartment; and one of them afk- ed if he was Coligni? |
144850375 | He died near 91? |
144850375 | He muft alfo learn to draw, by command of hand, fquares, circles, ovals, and other geometrical figures: for as the? |
144850375 | He was a poet, a philofopher, a phyfician, an aftronomer, a mathema¬ tician, and wh@t not? |
144850375 | He was fellow of the college of phyficians in London, and became a mod voluminous writer: he dilated greatly on the wonders of chemiftry; was a zea? |
144850375 | How dare thy joints forget To pay their awful duty to our prefence? |
144850375 | How does your Grace? |
144850375 | How much Sterling money is equivalent to 3390 pezzos 16 foldi, of Genoa, exchange at yj^-d. Sterling per pezzo? |
144850375 | How much Sterling money will pay a bill of 827''t''160 rees, exchange at 634-d. Sterling per millree? |
144850375 | How1 can this be paid? |
144850375 | I? |
144850375 | IFhat are the effects of variety in food? |
144850375 | If 20: 51- 4: 3390 16 47? |
144850375 | If I had fubmitted without a ftruggle, how much would it have diminiftied the luftre of my fall, and of your viftory? |
144850375 | If the door of the alh- hole() |
144850375 | If this be true, where is the woman that would not facrifice fuch a lover to her re- fentment? |
144850375 | If you Romans have a de¬ fire to arrive at univerfal monarchy, muft all nations, to gratify you, tamely fubmit to fervitude? |
144850375 | Ihips with? |
144850375 | In the year 1570 above- mentioned, queen Elizabeth fent a body of 1000 foot and 300 horfe, under the command of Sir Wil¬ liam Drury, to affift th? |
144850375 | In''what proportion animal and vegetable food ought to be mixed? |
144850375 | Indeed, in one of M. D’Arcet ’s own experiments, a diamond included in a ball of por? |
144850375 | Is it neceflary and al¬ lowable, or univerfally hurtful? |
144850375 | It differs from hntnediatcly in this, that even in the moft corrupt phrafes it never can denote part time* FORM.yki/?. |
144850375 | JLochs, by the great quantity and motion of the wa¬ ter, alfo wafte and whiten the flax, tho? |
144850375 | Jamaica currency amount to, exchange at 40 per cent.? |
144850375 | John, who was his favourite, among them, he could trcIn? |
144850375 | Laftly, make the gnomon the fame way as LXXXIX.J?! |
144850375 | Make with iron plates a? |
144850375 | Mr Miller has intimated, in the Philofophical Tranf- aftions, that bulbs fet in glafles grow weaker, and fhould be renewed every other year: but it? |
144850375 | Of roaftedmeat it may be allied, which are more proper; thofe which are moft or leaft roafted? |
144850375 | Of that Difeafe in the Feet com¬ monly ca/ Zec? |
144850375 | Of thefe indeed, he knew no more than that thi? |
144850375 | On hi? |
144850375 | On this it is natural to alk, how it comes to pafs, that while we fee myriads of the progeny of thefe winged infeds in water, we never fee themfelves? |
144850375 | On this occafion was fought one of the? |
144850375 | Or does not their different fufeeptibility of colour depend rather on the different intrinfic pro¬ perties of the two? |
144850375 | Qnse faga, quis te folvere Theflaiis Magus venenis, qnis poterit dcus? |
144850375 | Required the fun''s altitude? |
144850375 | See Conic Sec¬ tion?. |
144850375 | See Conyz A. Flea- Z?/7/ «, that colour of a horfe, which is white orgrey, fpotted all over with dark reddifh fpots. |
144850375 | See MoKEY- TinW?. |
144850375 | See £/>tf- DANCER. |
144850375 | She was fucceeded by James I. king of Scot¬ land; fine? |
144850375 | Since the waters remained io long upon the earth, why have they now deferted it? |
144850375 | Sir, that you would break my leg? ” No man was more expert at reducing the rigour of the maxims of the Stoics into pradlice. |
144850375 | So cold, that I admire they fall not hail? |
144850375 | Ster.? |
144850375 | Sterling, exchange at 4 s. per ducat? |
144850375 | Sterling/ er millree: How much Sterling money- will the remittance amount to? |
144850375 | Sterling/ w ducat? |
144850375 | Sterling/> «* piaftre? |
144850375 | Sterling? |
144850375 | Sterling? |
144850375 | Sterling? |
144850375 | Ster¬ ling amount to in Spain?'' |
144850375 | Ster¬ ling per piattre? |
144850375 | T6? |
144850375 | The Firth, or( as it is commonly written) the Frith, of Forth, is, at the mouth of it, from North Ber? |
144850375 | The Romans had no 13 X 2 heroes DAN[ 2.? |
144850375 | The complaints againft Henry ’s government were jnf^? |
144850375 | The firft was, Whether any part of the eucharift be evacua¬ ted by( tool? |
144850375 | The foi''ecaft of ant? |
144850375 | The fpunge to be? |
144850375 | The king afterwards made all the new judges fwear that they would take no bribes; but the depofing and fining the old ones was the more?'' |
144850375 | The king has the title of TIL/? |
144850375 | The quantity of fluid in one fide being diminilhed, that on the other, he fays, retires inward: but into what does it retire? |
144850375 | The que- ftion here is, Why the natural caufe which gave the earth fo much of a fpherical figure, did not make it a complete and exa& fphere? |
144850375 | The queftion then only is, What is this fubtile medi¬ um, the vibrations of which occafion tranfparency? |
144850375 | The queftion which molt naturally fuggetts itfelf when this is once admitted, is, Whence hath the eledric fluid come? |
144850375 | The re-! j fpedl which his followers paid to his memory is admi- U drum? |
144850375 | The term diJfona? |
144850375 | The woody roots of the heath are placed in the centre; the tops externally and in- Erdann? |
144850375 | Then, without altering the compafies, fet one foot in £ as a centre, and with the other foot deferibe the quadran? |
144850375 | There doth not feem to be any effential diffe- tion? |
144850375 | This appearance will occafion no fmall furprife, as the fpe&re will feem to rif? |
144850375 | This the Greeks call xavo- i?. |
144850375 | Through the centre or middle of Tlate XrVI? 533 DRAWING. |
144850375 | Thus the hopes of A1 Moftanfer were entirely fru- Decline of ftrated; and from this period we may date the declen-''J1''Egy?" |
144850375 | Thus, To the logarithmic fine of* 51? |
144850375 | Thus, the fluxion of — is-^LZA?. |
144850375 | To which therefore of thefe anceftors muft we firft refort, in order to find out defcendants to be preferably called to the in¬ heritance? |
144850375 | Very true, it will do fo; but why does not the man dream that he is fick? |
144850375 | Were not thefe the mur¬ murs of a heart ill at eafe? |
144850375 | What accident, what caufe, could introduce a change fo great? |
144850375 | What are we then to think of thefe? |
144850375 | What language were they talking when this bon mot was uttered? |
144850375 | What then has become of it? |
144850375 | What will 2279 guilders 1( liver 4 pen¬ nings, Holland currency, amount to in bank- money, the agio being 3-|- per cent? |
144850375 | Whence, then, has this fudden and great increafe of heat arifen? |
144850375 | Where was his gallantry on this occafion? |
144850375 | Whether they had been dutiful to their pa¬ rents, had ferved in the wars, and had a competent eflate? |
144850375 | Why any electricity can be obferved upon the furface of an eleCtrified body that is infulated at a con- fiderable diftance from other conductors? |
144850375 | Why peep your coward fwords half out their( hells? |
144850375 | Why then did it not produce the fame degree of heat in the middle that it did at each end? |
144850375 | Why, then, fhould this ufeful, patient, fober animal be fo much defpifed? |
144850375 | ^ 1? |
144850375 | and the fecond, Whether Chrift was born of the Virgin Mary aperta vulva? |
144850375 | coat-- 3? |
144850375 | eaft, re? |
144850375 | f See( Ih- Deafnefs generally arifes either from an obftrudlion,? e.x fub''‘ or a compreffion, of the auditory nerve; or from fome. |
144850375 | f? |
144850375 | fecutes rtfe* 154^ » t ® ie k*0? |
144850375 | in 1705, The Twin Rivals; and in 1706, the/? |
144850375 | might he objefted againft them,( though long ago over- ruled in the court of chan- Ecclefra? |
144850375 | n ° T? |
144850375 | of; 2ax a — x/ a7''-=£zxx= h7f>-,<>g- J+VS? |
144850375 | p.? j. |
144850375 | particles of the fait of tartar, and thofe of the water Le Gendre obferves, that the diffeftion of a human which float in the air in form of vapours? |
144850375 | per crown? |
144850375 | per millree? |
144850375 | per pound Sterling? |
144850375 | teffetts of At fea, the docks of this earthquake were felt moft* nik^at* v; ° lently-—Lucar, the captain of the Nancy fca? |
144850375 | that of X is^^ ’*+.? |
144850375 | the prepofition |
144850375 | tion of the parts? |
144850375 | where are you going,, king? |
144850375 | years of ag? |
144850375 | — TA? |
144850375 | “ If, ” fays Mr Walpole, “ thefe inftances are pro¬ blematic, are the following fo? |
144850376 | ( Mi?. |
144850376 | ( OrTUd/ c( s7le’t/ d/-z/ i^''vttnnrtm/ nurfid Os//n\ C 3 j%,ff//%a?/''sy~ O''ssmet/ ir//////S/ fiS^fr////,''// oo> or/ Srt/, t''j/ t’/sr/ W/? |
144850376 | *~u-.•''// ■- r ■ ■''•vr/ r.7--} y>? iv/>>: »( MXHfJ.13 V;''''■-c''- I I |
144850376 | , f/ GEO GliArHY A M at of the World m three Sections, D ef cribinjg th.e Polar He gions tollie Tropic s am///,? |
144850376 | -?. |
144850376 | -fults by his bull, granted the mod ample privileges to th? |
144850376 | /?///?. |
144850376 | 100?)'') |
144850376 | 104 7 m|]es? |
144850376 | 235.6 471.2 706.8 942.5 1178.1 Hid-? |
144850376 | 3667 Ecclefia- given to Adam was faifified or corrupted by his de-? |
144850376 | 3lS9 the wood ItfeH ’, which feetns to ttretch from the moft advanced point, back beyond the moft diftant to which it retire?. |
144850376 | 8> efy*ti/ Z? |
144850376 | 9.42 18.85 28.27 37- 70 47.12 56- 5? |
144850376 | ; and their digeftion is fo powerful, as to diffolyc GAD[ 3''Gs''du?. |
144850376 | f i d. |
144850376 | . |
144850376 | /Marshalling Coats- of- arms. |
144850376 | ? |
144850376 | ? |
144850376 | ? |
144850376 | A NEW Diftionary of Arts, Sciences,& c. GAB G, THE feventh letter, and fifth confonant, of our V- T? |
144850376 | A and B play at fingle quoits, and A is the bed gamefter, fo that he can give B 2 in 3: What is the ratio of their chances at a fingle throw? |
144850376 | A dodecaedron confilts of 12 pyramids having equal equilateral and equiangular pentagonal bafes; and lb one of thefe be-? |
144850376 | About the year 1709, he pub- lifhed his firft poem rntitled Ca? |
144850376 | And if, after he has pleaded, the prifoner becomes mad, he( hall not be tried: for how can he make his de¬ fence? |
144850376 | And on the contrary, may it not be a ufeful medicine to diminilh the dif- sharge when too copious? |
144850376 | And the fame as to qualities, and both kinds of quantities: for we fay without an article, what sort of, how many, how great? |
144850376 | And this perfe- verance in fo bad a caufe they call the point of ho¬ nour: ea e/ l in re prava pervicacia, ipfi fidem vocewl? |
144850376 | And why does our author forget Publius Scipio( Africanus ’s father), a prudent and able general, whom Hannibal vanquifhed at the Ticin? |
144850376 | As fome motions are homely, the oppofite to grace¬ ful; it is to be inquired, With what motions is this at¬ tribute connected? |
144850376 | At laft he was met by Decebalus with a numerous army- A bloody engagement- enfued, in which the Dacians were defeated; tho? |
144850376 | At the end of another hour it Was ftill fluid, except on the edges where it was tfimneft; and here it was ftill''tranfparent? |
144850376 | At this the chancellor fired: “ A trim¬ mer? |
144850376 | Brennus then, having ordered Acichc- rius, the next to him in command, to follow at a di-? |
144850376 | But M. Buffon, and fome other late hiftorians, affure that the animal pofftffes no fuch j? |
144850376 | But does this hold in fadt? |
144850376 | But fuppofe we are to add other fubftantives, as, for in-''f fiance, air, ox beams-, how could thefe coincide, or under what charafter be introduced? |
144850376 | But how long will they keep this colony? |
144850376 | But why does not a ball of iron, gold, filver, or copper, which are perhaps 2 thoufand times heavier than the flint, produce the fame effedt? |
144850376 | But, when we fay, the nu? |
144850376 | Can be underftand the rider ’s fpurring him with his face direfted to it, as a fign for him to pafs it? |
144850376 | Cannon royal, or"? |
144850376 | Compofi- he will be infenfibly fwayed by fotne paflion, to give think it proper to omit what I have been told. ” By ll?" |
144850376 | Diptera,( from‘fv", £ w, and* •%<> »> a ruing,) are fuch as have only two wings, and poifers; as in the fly, fig. |
144850376 | During the continuance of the? |
144850376 | Every time he blows into the- — pipe? |
144850376 | For the rule of law as to lunatic?, which alfo may be eafily adapted to idiots, is, that fu- riofus furore folum punitur. |
144850376 | For what is the caufe of this walking or fitting? |
144850376 | For why dop at a limited number, when in all fubje£ls fufceptible of intenfion the intermediate ex- ceffes are in a manner infinite? |
144850376 | For, how could there be fuch energies as to love, to fty, to wound? |
144850376 | From this city the/- lias of Homer takes its name, containing an account of the war carried on between the Greeks and Trojan? |
144850376 | GoLD- Cotf/?. |
144850376 | HAN0|1MF^ I St* g ■ IS a S1 Bueiifca? |
144850376 | Having ad¬ vanced about a quarter of a mile from the boat, three Indians rufhed out of the wood with a hideous( hout? |
144850376 | He held a great correfpondence with the Englilh, who perfuaded? |
144850376 | He took Lyfias for his model,, and fo well imitated his ftyl? |
144850376 | Head- F*/?, a rope employed to faften a( hip to a wharf, chain, or buoy, or to fome other veffel along- fide. |
144850376 | Hence w e may con? |
144850376 | Horse- Afzzyc/ i?. |
144850376 | How fare ye? ”& c. HAILLAN( Bernard de Girard, lord of), a ce¬ lebrated French hiftorian. |
144850376 | How is it poflihle they can know it is defigned as a punilhmcnt? |
144850376 | INTERROGATION, or Point of Interroga¬ tion, in grammar, a charafter of this form(?) |
144850376 | If flr? |
144850376 | If it be farther afleed, How the refiftance of the air can ever come to be oblique to the progref- five motion of the body? |
144850376 | If the horfe does not''back upon a ftraight line properly, the Hder mtift ■ not be permitted to bav? |
144850376 | If we queltion about fubftantives, we can not( ay the who is this; but who is this? |
144850376 | Ill Englilh law, it is a written accufation of one or more perfons of a crime or mifdemeanor, preferred to, p/ ucfy?. |
144850376 | In a word, the fmall femitone confifts of the difference between the greateft and the intermediate femitone; and it? |
144850376 | In the church of St Leonard, Shoreditch, two windows by| Baptifta Sutton? |
144850376 | In the name of wonder, why this flight and childilh reafoning, when immediately before he had obferved, that the hyperbole is founded on human nature? |
144850376 | Iron-#V?, in botany. |
144850376 | Is it a wonder that a horfe{ hould be afraid of a loaded waggon? |
144850376 | Is it hecaufe they are not elaftic? |
144850376 | Is it worth taking fo much pains to leave no memorial but a few poems? |
144850376 | It is faid, Why do not rapacious fifli, and aquatic quadrupeds and birds, devour thefe fwallows? |
144850376 | It is in like manner that the relative pronoun becomes an interrogative; as in this line from Milton,.Whofirftt[ educ''d them to that foul revolt? |
144850376 | Jsr 3C^&ivJ01-wimmr — Timmiiir^jmnii TWHi-—iiiiMg- AlOTBr:-Mill — iiiumc( y- J3oun< JSoto^ffioni^ortokn''Ml dSTtMe^tx? |
144850376 | Known or unknown? |
144850376 | N? |
144850376 | Part of the ftiell of an egg was peeled a- way, leaving only the film which furrounds the white? |
144850376 | Pom* ing, that “ he ought to preferve the charadlers of the? « « «. |
144850376 | Required the number of cubic inches, and the^weight of the ’ water, in an upright pipe 27%feet? |
144850376 | Seen now for the firjl time, or feen before and now remem¬ bered? |
144850376 | Solon, who was prefent, oppofed it with all his efforts, HillOCO- 1 J- J r J mete? |
144850376 | The Genoefe were very a&ive in the time of the? |
144850376 | The Jews obtained leave to return to Jews Ha- t^ie''r own coUnt''T> rebuild their temple, and again byldnian? |
144850376 | The Romans, who called the bull taurus, fpoke alfo of tawru? |
144850376 | The barrennefs of the Latin tongue in theological phrafes, allowed them but one word for the two Greek ones, w* and vrorao-*? |
144850376 | The man departs, and returns a week af¬ ter: What do I then fay? |
144850376 | The phrafe « •/> »? |
144850376 | The tribute exacted was calledfodcrum, parata, et? nanfiona~ ticum. |
144850376 | They put to fea in the depth of winter? |
144850376 | This is alfo ex¬ hibited more clearly in the Midship-/>v7#/ |
144850376 | Tho* the intervals between the buildings are large, they art? |
144850376 | To Generate what purpofe ferves fuch an immenfe profufion of hu-; man animalcules? |
144850376 | To explain this by an example, I fee an objedl pafs by which I never faw till then: What do I fay? |
144850376 | To his commands they were Power of? |
144850376 | To illuftrate this, he give? |
144850376 | To it may be tuned the re or D( harp immediately below by a fimilar chord: To D ftiarp, its oftave above: To y? |
144850376 | Tut what principally keeps the Whole movement fleady, is''the equilibrium''preferved in th |
144850376 | Ufe of Gunter’s- Z//?!?. |
144850376 | Ufe of Gunter’s- Z//?!?. |
144850376 | We are apt to fuppofe, that a horfe fears nothing fo much as his rider: but may he not, in many cir- cumftances, be afraid of inftant dedru&ion? |
144850376 | We cer- which? |
144850376 | We fhall for a moment allow, that the abforption of heat is the confequence, and not the caufe, of fluidity and va¬ pour: but what then is the caufe? |
144850376 | What better charafter Polybius took greater pains than he, in order to write can be given of a writer? |
144850376 | What can be the caufe of a motion fo different from what has been hitherto fuppofed? |
144850376 | What cheer? |
144850376 | Whatever pre- fented itfelf to our view bore the marks of devaftation; and our eyes, accuftomed to behold the pleafing coafls of England, now faw? |
144850376 | Whatftiould I fay? |
144850376 | When the rotation of the earth brings the plane of the( iKOGr. AriiY LMa((''C''XYT SPHERE^Tortli South(/{u/''j:,,//,? |
144850376 | Whence came ye? |
144850376 | Where a gaoler kills a prifoner by hard ufage, it is felony; 3/«/?. |
144850376 | Where are ye bound? |
144850376 | Whether his difeafe was curable? |
144850376 | Whether it be lawful for men to wear long hair? |
144850376 | Whether it be the one or the other, may be matter of indifference when it fall? |
144850376 | Whether the bread belonged to them when they were eating it, or to the pope, or to the Roman church? |
144850376 | Who can fhew fuch an example among the larger animals which are dignified with the title of per- fett? |
144850376 | Who firft feduc''d them? |
144850376 | Why are not thefe birds caught in fuch waters as are continually harrafltd by nets? |
144850376 | Why then ffiould the former founds produce confonances, and why fliould the latter not produce them, fince all of them equally refult from nature? |
144850376 | With regard to fuch horfes as are afraid of burning i objects, begin by keeping them dill at a certain di-? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | Would the Romans have chofen that order for a temple? ” The expence of building that church was 4500 1. |
144850376 | Z)/ra? |
144850376 | ^ 0;l- rt''. A » « « «,>< « of o.j.f Cootro Mbom* Kau!,IM‘‘tor V,? |
144850376 | ^, 1? v^Vr.) |
144850376 | ^s\_._3r\ w,- AAyW\A/ WW\ mrmwmw 1$ 0a//X^y cfrn/ wJf/ et/? |
144850376 | a fufficient proof that( a) The fade of the thermometer, which was fufpended by the firing: about the middle of the room, was of metal? |
144850376 | and by far the greateft part of thofe who had efcaped fo many dangers returned t? |
144850376 | c ‘ ‘ •/AJ<•// |
144850376 | can thoughtlefs mortals fail? |
144850376 | certain indications of fenfe and motion? |
144850376 | do they I love? |
144850376 | f- i? |
144850376 | fons; Daughters, 5 Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | fons; Daughters, 5 Wives of the elded? |
144850376 | g^*z«u£p0^ 00 x$tr ’[ Ctcas#* • Bon J> unde&-Oa/ m/ t-kGkOIy G O ND A^ojcotula^ 0Jr^ Iww Tropic of Cancer jt/ yarc/ o i^ Grruvt Sa 7? |
144850376 | it is the will and vital powers belonging to Ceefar: And what is the fubjed made fo to move or fit? |
144850376 | may not the hanging load feem to threaten the falling on him? |
144850376 | of France, about the middle of the 5th century, and forme? |
144850376 | of being crulhed? |
144850376 | of being drowned? |
144850376 | of falling down a preci¬ pice? |
144850376 | only be effedtually done by giving a check to the vegetation in autumn, fo as t |
144850376 | or the words his and her ’s, but afeertain two indivi¬ dual forms, which are compared with one another? |
144850376 | pofition of their flowers, ss Theophraftus and Ray''? |
144850376 | the heavens are open; if you enter not now, when will you enter? |
144850376 | veffels ceafe to a< ft, as, according to Dr Dugud him- “ Thus it appears, that, in refpiration, the blood felf, it fometimes doth? |
144850376 | — But it may be aftted, If thefe are not genitives, to what clafs of words can they be referred? |
144850376 | — Is it not then probable, that when he is driven up to a carriage he darts at, he conceives himfelf obliged either to attack or run againft it? |
144850376 | — Of what kind? |
144850376 | — Who ever faw a beautiful Tufcan building? |
144850376 | “ Argent, an Unicorn fejant Sable, uno- uled Thefe, like the foregoing charges, are fubjedt to and horned borne by the name of Harling? |
144850376 | “ Do you imagine,( fays Cicero,) that Pacuvius wrote in cold blood? |
144850376 | “ Party per Pale, 1/?, Paly of fix Argent and Sable, 2d, Azure; ” borne by.the name of Trencbard. |
144850376 | “ The H E B H E B[ 3557 1 Hebride?. |
144850376 | “ XL When the veflel is an hyperbolic conoid, “ let the axis of the folid be to the conjugate axis as"z? |
190273289 | % 4-? » g. |
190273289 | ( cried he) have I neither friend nor enemy? ” And then running defperately forth, feemed refolved to plunge headlong into the Tiber. |
190273289 | 1. will be large pj? |
190273289 | 1/?, That evaporating the water from the lime and faks by boil¬ ing, is a moft unfrugal way of preparing thefe white alhes. |
190273289 | 2 g |
190273289 | 4? |
190273289 | ; and James formed a refolution of re- fuming thefe lands wherever they could be difeovered, iS? |
190273289 | . |
190273289 | ? 0 rc[orms tering his own kingdom, fhould give fufficient hoftages fituation. |
190273289 | ? jgJ< iS^=5i8c, X.0=.o 300 • ’ 300 miles. |
190273289 | ?, is an officer in Chancery- lane, Lon¬ don, appointed for the cuftody of the rolls and records in chancery. |
190273289 | ?. ’: their commander was ftyled preefettus pratorii. |
190273289 | ?/ des aigrettes. |
190273289 | ?< Ti the republic was on the point of being fubverted by ° atlinei a confpiracy formed by Lucius Sergius Catiline. |
190273289 | A lighted candle held in the receiver till? |
190273289 | A paffenger, meeting him on the way, cried, “ There go men in purfuit of Nero. ” Another afktd him, if there was any news of Nero in the city? |
190273289 | A piece of the infide of a China orange"? |
190273289 | Among the Jews there were both ordinary and public facrifices, as holocaufts,& c. offered by way of 36 O thankf- PRO[ Propolis thankfgivin? |
190273289 | And as we before obferved, that occupancy gave the right to the temporary a/? |
190273289 | And by th? |
190273289 | And yet the mafs of mankind are to look upon the king as a fuperior being; and the maxim, that “ the king can do no wrong, ” is to remain a? |
190273289 | And, what is equally furprifing, and has been equally unnoticed by the critics, the Welflv diftinguifit England by the name of Loegr ot? |
190273289 | Animadverftones philologies C? |
190273289 | At fird he He invade? |
190273289 | At laft Brutus had courage to fpeak to it: “ Art thou a dsemon or a mortal man? |
190273289 | Being aflced by the emperor, with a Item countenance, what had brought him there at that unfeafonable time? |
190273289 | Brompton,?. |
190273289 | But ffl how came Cecrops to have any conneftion with Cy¬ prus? |
190273289 | But fuppofing that there did, will ever this ac¬ count for the generation of lime? |
190273289 | But how does it imerpofe and compel? |
190273289 | But how muff we difcover this different manner? |
190273289 | But leaving apart what may be wonderful in thefe rivers, it may be afked, how they are loft? |
190273289 | By Of Wheel?:;. |
190273289 | CL t? |
190273289 | Diffolve, in fpirits of wine or vinegar, a little fait? |
190273289 | Do you fpeak of one and the fame per- fon, you will alk? |
190273289 | Every one, without ex¬ ception, brought in his name, age, the particulars of 8? |
190273289 | For no portion whatever of her re? |
190273289 | Happily for Poland; however, a rupture took place between the courts of Sweden and Copenhagen; by which means th? |
190273289 | Having heard the jefuits fpeak much of I China and Japan, he ftarted the wild fcheme, when II he was in Germany, of pafiing for a native of the? |
190273289 | He ftill cried out, Where is my couftn the prince sf Wales? |
190273289 | He ordered Rouge Croix to be called in; and after treating him with great polite- nef?,.. |
190273289 | He purfued Camus; and having over-R.ft tfJ? |
190273289 | He was murdered in the 28th year of his reign by one Mithridates, whom authors fuppofe to have been hi? |
190273289 | He was prefent at the battle of Lepanto, fought in the year 1571? |
190273289 | Hegave them officers of all degrees? |
190273289 | Hence a celebrated quedion, Whether ridicule be or be not a ted of truth? |
190273289 | Here it may be afked, Why then, fince they endure fuch a fire, are they not » ’ itrified? |
190273289 | His bodyln? am ‘ was brought back to Scotland, and interred in the church of Douglas. |
190273289 | His morals anfwered the homelinefs of Politic? |
190273289 | How? |
190273289 | If only this or that body arife, how( hall it be reward¬ ed or puinfhed for what was done by the other? |
190273289 | Iji) The city was firft obliged to pay 800,000 guilders,? |
190273289 | In 1545, the fea between Roftbck and Denmark, and likewife between Fionia and Sealand, was thus frozen, that? |
190273289 | In a word, where is the fenfe of perfonal identity, which feems abfolutely infeparable from every adl of memory? |
190273289 | In imitation of th? |
190273289 | In like manner it will be Lx CN= AH{\& c. But becaufe it is BG: AG::( EP: AP:: by hypothefis) AP: L; it will be LxBG= AGXAP= AGXAG+AGXGP= AG?. |
190273289 | In she former country they laid fiege to Breflau, and in? be latter to Colberg. |
190273289 | In the firft of thefe Dorylaus loft vTftori''cTin I5,00 °^ ’s mcn according to fome, or 200,000 Greece? |
190273289 | In the ho- 4?? |
190273289 | In the ho- 4?? |
190273289 | In the''fame proclamation it was affirmed, that he tun? |
190273289 | In this town are feveral charity? |
190273289 | In.the mean time, Robert, being yet ignorant of the murder of his fon, had renewed, or rather Con- ScotLtif? |
190273289 | InfefteJ the part of the country In which he livec?. |
190273289 | Is it likely that Zell, who was a German, would have omitted to mention Slraf- burg, if it had preceded Mentz in printing? |
190273289 | Is it more doubtful whether our fenfe of ridi¬ cule be the true teft of what is ridiculous? |
190273289 | Is not the whole land be¬ fore thee? |
190273289 | It brought water from 40 mile? |
190273289 | It is faid that this animal is apt to be difeafed; but why were not inconveniencies felt on that account in Greece? |
190273289 | It was known to the Romans in very early times; its figure is among the animal? |
190273289 | It was moved, whether biftiops, as conftituted in Scotland, bad any authority for their fundions from the Scrip¬ tures? |
190273289 | J0? |
190273289 | J4? |
190273289 | JI? |
190273289 | James was a great patron of archi- c".federacy te£ure; and being pleafed with the fituation of Stir- agaUift the* ‘ nf? |
190273289 | Jo8 j Dioclefian was a perfon of mean birth; being ac- Diocletian j counted, according to fome, the fon of a ferivener; raifed to th? |
190273289 | LXEP= AP?. |
190273289 | Let me perilh, do I never fay any thing worthy to.be laugh’d at? |
190273289 | Meal? |
190273289 | Meal? |
190273289 | Nay, he even took him back to Poland, and appointed him a main¬ tenance fuitable to his rank: but he foon bad reafon 4? |
190273289 | Niger de- One of the chief obftaclesto his march was, the lea- felted and v;ng behind him Clodius Albinus, commander of th? |
190273289 | Nor call one longing ling''ring look behind? |
190273289 | Notwkhfta.nding the want of provifions in the garrifon, they had been{ pared out? |
190273289 | Now, there-[ 6824] ROM fore, his prodigality put him upon new methods of by land, have the immediate pcfTeffion of their fortune?. |
190273289 | On the other hand, the elaftic principle received from the air* See B/ W, by the blood*, by invigorating the powers of life, a? |
190273289 | On the other hand, the friends of Gracchus, who were difperfed by parties in different places, cried out, We are ready: What mufi •we do? |
190273289 | One of them had the boldnefs to anfwer him by part of a line from Virgil: Ufque adeone rniferunt ejl mart? |
190273289 | Ought it not then to have been tried in fuch fmall quantity, and fo much diluted, that its coagulating power would not have deftroyed life? |
190273289 | PoRro- i^rr^/i?, a handfome town of Italy, in the ifle of Elba, with a good citadel. |
190273289 | Que veux- tu dire avec ta demi- lune? |
190273289 | Quin/ fn? |
190273289 | R O S[ 688? |
190273289 | RED- j&ra?/?, in ornithology. |
190273289 | REEVING, in th? |
190273289 | RESOLUTION/Ideas. |
190273289 | Races were known in England in very early time?. |
190273289 | Ruflia rava? |
190273289 | S C A[ 6970] S C A thought of death? |
190273289 | See Apol- 10.—Thefe game?, at their firft inftitution, were ce¬ lebrated Python Quaflrans. |
190273289 | See the article&?< i- Salt. |
190273289 | She was committed to the houfe of a burgefs, and treated with, the vikft in? |
190273289 | Sixth? nutation, is a ftanding piece, called the crofs fire. |
190273289 | So difagreeable a conftraint upon the emperor ’s inclinations, was, in the end, attended with the moft happy effects, as it caufed the adoption 3? |
190273289 | Sulphur made to burn on a piece of"? |
190273289 | Te fouvient- if, vicomte, de cette de¬ milune, que nous emportames fur les ennemis au fiege d’Arras? |
190273289 | That inch ib? |
190273289 | The Chriftians advanced with the greateft a? |
190273289 | The Nile, the Gan¬ ges, th? |
190273289 | The Spanifli and Por-1?1? |
190273289 | The appellation of/c/’i? |
190273289 | The death of the marquis d’Ancre having produced a revolution in ftate- affairs, Richlieu retired to Avignon; where he em-? |
190273289 | The earl of Angus, finding that he could not regain the favour of the king, had recourfe to the me¬ thod ufual in thofe day?, viz. |
190273289 | The fenate having thus difpatched Didius, fent''am- Siveriw |
190273289 | The houles you comprehend or conceive that they are thus incom- are built of bricks dried in the fun; the roofs are fiat prehenfible, or do you not? |
190273289 | The idols of pa- ganifm were now thrown down; churches and mona- fleries were eredled, towns built, and the art? |
190273289 | The large Angle mortars are called/> |
190273289 | The next year Mor¬ ton( A) Jebb, voL U. p. aa?. ’ It has never been publilhed. |
190273289 | The next year, how¬ ever, the government returned to its ancient channel, and confuls were chofen,, 30? |
190273289 | The occafion of this confederacy is faid to have againft| been, that the Englift monarch, Edward the Elder, Ellglai1? |
190273289 | The only queftion therefore can be, By what means are the calcareous earths deprived of their fixed air? |
190273289 | The pump was then? |
190273289 | The weaknefs of the government in that kingdom, and the confufion in which it was involved, were ftill more perfuafive reafon? |
190273289 | The word is formed from the Latin, quoties; q- d. How often is fuch a number contained in fuch another? |
190273289 | The year ended with a new truce between the two nationsj and hollilities were not renewed till 1346, when David Scotlant?. |
190273289 | Thefe had firft intended, now preceded no lefs than the fub- Ruffia= wer?> Jacomir, fon of Briteflaus duke of Bohemia; jedion of the whole country. |
190273289 | Their conference lafted for three days; and the refult a2? |
190273289 | Their farm- grounds are well flocked with wheat, rye, barley, oats, hemp, and flax? |
190273289 | Their fedival of the Diamadigofis is well known; when the Spartan boy? |
190273289 | Then again fay, as, 3o0o:?. |
190273289 | Then the crier proclaimed with a loud voice, Who is here? |
190273289 | They1 appear in fmall flocks on our coaits in September, and continue with us the whole winter; they w? |
190273289 | This fummary, which had the title of T/> |
190273289 | This happened in the midft of September; what effedi then mult the intenfe froft of a night in January not pro¬ duce? |
190273289 | Though the whole power of the fenate and people* was now veiled in Anguftus, jet, that he might feem* ROM[ 68 to{ hare it with the confcript father? |
190273289 | Thu? |
190273289 | Upon this he refolved to take a mod exemplary ven- 8s? |
190273289 | Upon what principle is the lex talionls founded, other than to make the puniffiment refemble the tnifchief? |
190273289 | VI, fix the blocks and windlafles between the others, fo Aquatic that when fhe fails out,( he will be between the other Flrcwork? |
190273289 | Variation in- weight during the experiments..? |
190273289 | Water in a glafs cup, diameter two? |
190273289 | What can be more horrid to the imagination, than to fuppofe a father leading the deareft of all his fons to fuch an infernal fhrine? |
190273289 | What fhall de honed man do in my clofet? |
190273289 | What is this but an open violation ofjuftice? |
190273289 | What need you tell me that? |
190273289 | What ’s he? |
190273289 | What( hall I fay more? |
190273289 | When the executioners began to prepare for their fatal errand, he expoftulated with them, demanding what crime he had committed? |
190273289 | When you would fire the rockets, fet them on a fmooth table, and light the leaders in the? |
190273289 | Whence then comes this lime? |
190273289 | Where are the crowds of concomitant, antecedent, or fubfequent ideas, with which thofe recolledtions ought naturally to have been attended? |
190273289 | Whereabouts? |
190273289 | Whereupon Protogenes with a fierce look, allied how one who was fuch an enemy to the emperor^could be fuch a friend to him? |
190273289 | Whether ought fimilar emotions to fucceed each other, or diffimilar? |
190273289 | Which of thofe many bodies, then, which the fame perfon has in the courfe of his life, is it that( hall rife? |
190273289 | Who is the man, that, reading the pad hiftory of this country, will ftiovv us any king that has done no wrong? |
190273289 | Whofe ambaffadors being alked, What ment: and one may be a prifoner on matter of record punifhrnent they deferred for their revolt? |
190273289 | Why then fhould we not prepare falls from this vege¬ table? |
190273289 | ^ 10? |
190273289 | and CrafTui Both generals were at the head of powerful armies; a^ume and a contell between them immediately began about? reat au!^ °! |
190273289 | and rell his arms? |
190273289 | and why Cornell thou to me? |
190273289 | and why the diaphragm is contra&ed downwards towards the abdomen? |
190273289 | and with what juftice does one perfon fufferfor another? |
190273289 | arfd mealed powder 1-?. |
190273289 | as a pre¬ rogative of the crown? |
190273289 | as alfo the marks oi interrogation(?) |
190273289 | bonier, i. e. repdlere, to put back or bar) is the anfwer of defendant to plain? |
190273289 | cafe? |
190273289 | dr. Corn}p ° W‘i"''£''-''- ’? |
190273289 | ffi? |
190273289 | forfeiture of goods and chattel?,. |
190273289 | ftudied for that purpofe? |
190273289 | fuch conceptions, thoroughly believed, excite in the mind? |
190273289 | furnamed Zh? |
190273289 | how, my Lord? |
190273289 | i.&t?,. |
190273289 | i8j This flaughter being over, Cinna named himfelf and8? |
190273289 | incefiant labour of fifteen years had eftablilh- it was with him? |
190273289 | look ye, look ye, you do? |
190273289 | of an equable and deli¬ berate nature( as in the minuet, the military ftep,& c.)? |
190273289 | opinion that he was murdered with his wife and chil? |
190273289 | or a mother the moft engaging and affec¬ tionate of her daughters, juft rifing to maturity, to be flaughtered at the altar of Afhteroth or Baal? |
190273289 | or does all the matter that has ever belonged to him rife again? |
190273289 | or does only fome particular fyftem thereof? |
190273289 | sam[ 6946 1 sam Samaria at the village Ginsea, in the Campus Magnus, and Sambucus en^ln? |
190273289 | ted by the learned induftry of the prefent age, may"be ufefully applied to reveal the fecret and remote j*? |
190273289 | the body, for example, he had at 20, at 40, or at 60 years old? |
190273289 | what, affront my wit? |
190273289 | would have made any perfonal advances towards a re? |
190273289 | •< 55? |
144850378 | ( 11) La]) being the third major below ut, will be f-( note c): «? |
144850378 | (?/ca/ e. |
144850378 | /(//ea/ e j 277\> 2/1 27/ 27c 27nn? |
144850378 | 1 think, I reafon, I feel pleafure and pain: can any of thefe be more evident to me than my own ex fence? |
144850378 | 1* 1 ate OJ/XXXT7> T r.t?, trD-In OtTNTA r^//^V/c%r/ f? |
144850378 | 2 And half our failors fwallowed in the flood? |
144850378 | 2.7/2/?. |
144850378 | 2.? |
144850378 | 29 Ev«n M U S[ 5254 1 M U S Mu?. |
144850378 | 2? |
144850378 | 2? |
144850378 | 2?. |
144850378 | 2?. |
144850378 | 2dly, Produce B to A, till BA be equal to 117.7? |
144850378 | 3//0, How long was the animal allowed to live? |
144850378 | 4/0, Was its( kin preferved, or the head, or any other bones of the( keleton? |
144850378 | 5, 2?. |
144850378 | 5/0, Is the mother( till alive? |
144850378 | 56 Now whaf provifion has the Author of our nature Provifions made for this neceffitous condition? |
144850378 | 6? |
144850378 | 76 ° 23 ’ weft? |
144850378 | 8? |
144850378 | :? tg. |
144850378 | . |
144850378 | . |
144850378 | >. |
144850378 | ? |
144850378 | ? |
144850378 | ? 2jh; and of the moon about the earth in 27d. |
144850378 | ? e11 s op!" |
144850378 | ? nces nance fa in the preceding chord ut mi fol ut. |
144850378 | ?- M E X Mexico, confiderable length. |
144850378 | ?. |
144850378 | A method has likewife been invented of reprefenting each of the founds in this fcale by a letter of the alphabet; la by A,9? |
144850378 | After having paffed then by the mode of la to the chordyij/ i&y? |
144850378 | Afters wards? |
144850378 | Almighty Being, Caufe and fupport of all things, can I view Thefe objeftsof my wonder, can I feel Thefe fine fenfations, and not think of thee? |
144850378 | An interval compofed of a tone and a ferni- Second re¬ tone, which is commonly called a third minor, is like- dundant,[ f] wife*hat*( p?) |
144850378 | And if the quan¬ tity of matter in a given fpace can by any rarefa&ion be diminiftied, what fliould hinder a diminution to in¬ finity? |
144850378 | And is it thus mv juft revenge improves The fair occafion to chaftixe my foe? |
144850378 | And is old Double dead? |
144850378 | And move in that obedient orb again, Where you did give a fair and natural light? |
144850378 | And though it were true, would it follow from thence, that the Greeks had borrowed the name as well as the art from Egypt? |
144850378 | And which way can the value of that be de¬ termined? |
144850378 | Are we now in the major mode of ut? |
144850378 | As foon a? |
144850378 | As the waters of the lake, during the rainy feafon, overflowed the flat country, thefe caufeways were of? |
144850378 | At this angle alfo, as at D, other( horter lucid ftreaks were vifible; bent in the form of a plume? |
144850378 | At what period? |
144850378 | At what time mull it be performed? |
144850378 | At what time was( he covered; and when did( he foal? |
144850378 | Befides, the chord fa, la, ut, re, being al- Seemi ”? |
144850378 | But here it may be alked, Why( hould the money- jobber melt down the filver coin? |
144850378 | But how( hall we know when our ideas agree with things themfelves? |
144850378 | But in the mean time Napi, having gather¬ ed together a fuperior army, fuddenly attacked Otho and Burr?, and defeated them. |
144850378 | But is not a compaX or promife binding, till men have agreed that they fhall be binding? |
144850378 | But is not a man drank or fober the fame per¬ fon? |
144850378 | But it may be faid, how( hall we diftinguifh this chord from the fe¬ venth major, which, as it would feem, ought to be marked with a 7$? |
144850378 | But ought they to reckon upon this as real, or to confider it as feigned? |
144850378 | But then what is the pledge which the public faith has pawned for the fecurity of thefe debts? |
144850378 | But what reafon is there to fuppafe, that tooo and 100 were the numbers which letters were firft ufed to exprefs? |
144850378 | But where does this money exift? |
144850378 | But wherefore, could not I pronounce Amen? |
144850378 | But why{ hould this multiplied found only appear to contain three, and why thefe three prefer¬ able to others? |
144850378 | But( con¬ tinues he) of what nature is this matter which an animal or vegetable aflimilates to its own fubftance? |
144850378 | Can it be dill neceffary to adduce more con¬ vincing proofs? |
144850378 | Can then his blood, his precious blood, alone Extinguifh all the vengeance in my heart? |
144850378 | Can this cryftallifation be owing to falts, which are faid not to a6 t in this manner but when they are difolved in water? |
144850378 | Ce mortel, qui montra tant de zele pour moi, Vit- il encore? |
144850378 | Could Plato, Socrates, Seneca, and Cicero, be unconcerned for their fame among future generations and future philofophers? |
144850378 | Could any part thereof be dill found? |
144850378 | Did he travel with his wives, as the patriarchs did with their flocks and herds? |
144850378 | Do not we highly approve the man who fulfils them, even though they fhould prove to be againft his intereft? |
144850378 | Does not this virtually determine the value of fuch currency with regard to all the currencies in Europe? |
144850378 | Even if it were fincere, could they promife on its con¬ tinuance? |
144850378 | Every carries the fifth 7? |
144850378 | Every note figured with an 8 gives its third below Compo- figure(J wkh a?>( See LVm.) |
144850378 | Finally, in the fame manner, if in this feries of do¬ minants, one fhould caufe ft to carry fa% in this man¬ ner, y? |
144850378 | Finally, the enharmonic is the leatl agreeable i: j Laftly, the 0f bccaufe the fundamental bafs which gives it is''? |
144850378 | For afeertaining with? |
144850378 | For are the refults of experience any thing more but mere approaches to truth? |
144850378 | For in fad, was it pof- fible for them to believe the pagan fables? |
144850378 | Had you ever a die- mule? |
144850378 | Have I any pleafure that the wicked fliould die, faith the Lord God; and not that he ftiould re¬ turn from his ways, and live? ” Ezekiel xviii. |
144850378 | He then clofes his rear, which he oppofes to their?, keeping himfelf. |
144850378 | Here oc¬ curs a queftion: Does the great quantity of paper- money in Eng¬ land tend to diminifh the value of the pound Sterling? |
144850378 | How a fcore of ewes now? |
144850378 | How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair? |
144850378 | How many means, of confequence, may be pradtifed to vary the expreffion of the fame modula¬ tion? |
144850378 | I14 Such eyes as are of a due convexity, can not fee any Of the lead objed diftindly at lefs diftance than fix inches; and angle of v4? |
144850378 | II NOBLE, a money of account containing fix( hillings N ° aurfia?. |
144850378 | If there be a fharp on the cleff offa, and if I fhould incline to mark the chord fol fi re fa, or th? |
144850378 | If to a chord of the fimple dominant, as> •? |
144850378 | If you fay he means the church, how does the church feed on lawns,- or range in the foreft? |
144850378 | In mufic, therefore, it is.far from being fynonimous with the word rg/?. |
144850378 | In the JSneid, Baxce?. |
144850378 | In the reign of Jame? |
144850378 | In thefe matraffes folutions may very eafily be made Over 69? |
144850378 | Is it in¬ ternal haemorrhage, or the extravafation of fluids into the cavity of the abdomen? |
144850378 | Is it nervous, or uterine irritation, from cutting, that kills? |
144850378 | Is it only for bodily exercifes, or for moral, political, and religious ones? |
144850378 | Is it poffible to conceive it can add motion to itfelf, or produce any? |
144850378 | Is it the voice of thunder, or my father? |
144850378 | Is it true that the mule had a foal? |
144850378 | Is not that good? |
144850378 | Is not this ftay voluntary? |
144850378 | Is old Double of your town living yet? |
144850378 | Is the.fa&.fufficientiy authenticated, that mufic had been praclifed in Egypt before it was known in Greece? |
144850378 | Is this the utmoft extent of her plot, where ® utl?r s Ihe winds up the drama, and difmiffes the adlor into eternal oblivion? |
144850378 | It is alfo to be obferved, that though excels in natural venery i? |
144850378 | It is of a circula? |
144850378 | It may be afked, how, at this rate, any filver has remained in England? |
144850378 | It may be alked what became of this group of wives? |
144850378 | It may be demanded, What hurt this trade can do to Britain, fince thofe who export filver bring back the fame value in gold? |
144850378 | It may be inquired in this place, how far the coin¬ ing the pound troy into 65( hillings is contrary to the laws of England? |
144850378 | Knew you not Pompey? |
144850378 | Let us fuppofe its parts firmly at reft together: If there were no other being in the world, muft it not eternally remain fo, a dead unaftive lump? |
144850378 | Let? |
144850378 | M I N E R A Inflam- i?. |
144850378 | M U S[ 5264] M U S Mufe?, pleafure which thofe receive who are verfed in the H- Mufgravc. |
144850378 | M U ir Prii cipies chords of the h''JttxhJolJt re/ a, re fa la at, yi? |
144850378 | MON r? i66 1 MON one ponnd of fine gold bullion. |
144850378 | Made in his concave ihores? |
144850378 | Many other tree? |
144850378 | May not contrail heighten the pleafure, by oppoling our prefent fecurity to the danger of en¬ countering the objedt reprefented? |
144850378 | May not the analogy here juflly apply to the human fubjedl? |
144850378 | Mediolanum Gag- erTwnm? |
144850378 | MiLiTARY- Sf**?, in Britilh polity, one of the three divifions of the laity. |
144850378 | Military CWA See Chivalr- y( CWi? |
144850378 | Motive# |
144850378 | Near Leeffoe in the diocefe of Chriftianfand, a wooden caufeway is extended near a mile over a moraf? |
144850378 | North-£«/? |
144850378 | Now what fhall fecure a man ’s virtue in circumdances of fuch trial? |
144850378 | O quid agis? |
144850378 | Of the]?| of the earth, as every different country has different SeafonsjH advantages from nature. |
144850378 | One effec¬ tual way to lower the opinio? |
144850378 | Or are not the fatal con- fequences rather to be imputed to the accefs of the air on the irritable vifcera? |
144850378 | Or does the God of P 22, nature envy the happinefs of his offspring? |
144850378 | Parti, MORAL PH Is nature fullen and penurious? |
144850378 | Perception, which we make the ad of the underftanding, is of three forts: iy?, The percep¬ tion of ideas in our minds, idly. |
144850378 | Q/ VA? |
144850378 | Quid caufae eft, merito quin illis Jupiter ambas Iratas buccas infiet? |
144850378 | See Senegal, Guinea, Gold- CW/?, and Slave- Csa/?. |
144850378 | Six flats, y?!? |
144850378 | Six flats, y?!? |
144850378 | Swine get provifion by turning up the earth; for there they find the fucculent roots, which to them are? |
144850378 | Tantae? noUs erat Romanam condere gentem. |
144850378 | Thd*ftill furviving, might he not atone For all the wrongs I feel, by gentler fmart? |
144850378 | The Cataigorod, furrounded with a brick- wall, is the middle o? |
144850378 | The candleftick has different concentric grooves for keeping the refults of the trial? |
144850378 | The fame calx, when precipitated from acid? |
144850378 | The king fliall be contented: muft he lol’e The name of king? |
144850378 | The king( hall do it: muft he be depos’d? |
144850378 | The minerals containing gold are blend, cupreous and arfenical pyrites, ore of antimony, cin¬ nabar, white ore of arfenic, vitreous and other filve? |
144850378 | The name is derived from the Saxon word Snottengha?n, which fignifies caves, from the caves and apartments anciently du? |
144850378 | The palm- trees f produce the fago,? na. |
144850378 | There is ftill another kind of cadence calledIntem, Pte |
144850378 | Therefore, as man ’s jirutture and connexions often fubjedf him to fuch a itate of moral obligation, we conclude that/6 |
144850378 | Therefore,& c. 4?. |
144850378 | They reached the lirft breach in the caufeway with- 4? |
144850378 | Thus the regard due what fhould limit our purfuits of private happinefs? |
144850378 | Thus, how many are amf with- held from the violent outrages of refmtment by fear? |
144850378 | Thus, if A be a point of an objeft placed within pjah? |
144850378 | Tie-It/S''0?, it rtf?rvov urtp ’ AfpoSirtie> What is life and all its pride, If love and pleafure be denied? |
144850378 | Tie-It/S''0?, it rtf?rvov urtp ’ AfpoSirtie> What is life and all its pride, If love and pleafure be denied? |
144850378 | To what caufe fhall we afcribe thefe Angular appearances? |
144850378 | To what caufe is the unfuccefsful event of this operation to be imputed? |
144850378 | To what conduCt are we obliged? |
144850378 | Upon what is this gratuitous fuppofition founded? |
144850378 | Was there any thing particular in its figure? |
144850378 | We fhall illuftrate I? |
144850378 | We may conceive without diffi¬ culty how the eye judges of relations; but how does the ear form fimilar judgments? |
144850378 | Well, father, and how do all at home? |
144850378 | What could have been done more to my vineyard, that I have not done? |
144850378 | What duty does nature diCtate and require in fuch a cafe? |
144850378 | What is her age? |
144850378 | What is the caufe of this difference? |
144850378 | What is the confequence of this? |
144850378 | What is the confequence of this? |
144850378 | What power is it that communicates to this ciaUer the aftivity and motion neceffary to penetrate this Nux mould? |
144850378 | What then is the confequence of all this diforder; WEat effect has it upon the current value of a pound Sterling? |
144850378 | What then is the fecond principle? |
144850378 | What would compafsion in his favour plead? |
144850378 | When mixed with ordinary wine, they give to it the piquancy and fparkling quality of Champaigne win?. |
144850378 | When the operation proves fatal, to what immediate caufe are jpe to afcribe the death of the patient? |
144850378 | When we know that white is not black, what do we but perceive that thefe two ideas do not agree? |
144850378 | Where¬ fore, when I looked that it fhould bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes? |
144850378 | Who are paid in fuch pounds? |
144850378 | Who is equal to Ofcar but Dermid? |
144850378 | Why elfe is he puniftied for the fame fa£t he commits when drunk, tho ’ he be never afterwards con¬ fcious of it? |
144850378 | Why fleep’ft thou, Eve? |
144850378 | Why then( hould Linnaeus, the great explorer of thefe rude defarts, be amazed at the myriads of water- fowl that migrated with him out of Lapland? |
144850378 | Why( hould a man, whofe blood is warm within,, Sit like his grandfire cut in alabafter? |
144850378 | Would fuch abortions in the moral world be congruous to that perfection of wifdom and goodnefs which upholds and adorns the natural? |
144850378 | You would not be a queen? |
144850378 | [?, then, is f- off*; that is to fay|f-. |
144850378 | ^bolu?'' |
144850378 | and how ea¬ gerly do they ftill grafp at new difcoveries, without any fatisfa&ion or limit to their ambition? |
144850378 | and is cultivated in great quantities in the fouth of France, Italy, and Portugal, for the fruit to make the olive- oil, which is in fo great repute? |
144850378 | and not for fpeculation, or fruitlefs fearches after knowledge, we alk, For what kind of action? |
144850378 | and reftlefs: a tame one kept by Mr Gmelin was ac? |
144850378 | and the fame people convert the Greek », at the end of a word in¬ to an? n, as phannacum, Sec. |
144850378 | and would not this be a violent and an arbitrary revolution in the value of the money- unit, and a railing of the ftandard? |
144850378 | can he not buy gold with it as well without melting it down? |
144850378 | e, h. Are the two parts of which the Blow-/5//.? |
144850378 | f?. |
144850378 | fimilar force that the internal nlould itfelf might be^yflant* es reproduced? |
144850378 | fliould we not fu- fpeCt the reafoner of knavery, or of very weak affec¬ tions to virtue? |
144850378 | g? |
144850378 | gl It was not long, however, before Kepler ’s new Hi? |
144850378 | how does brother Dick, and brother Val? |
144850378 | how eafy might the enemy deftroy her? |
144850378 | i °? |
144850378 | ido, What was the colour of the foal? |
144850378 | ing to the latitude the( hip ’ ’s in 5 Take the meridional parts aniweringto-? |
144850378 | is a? noral agent. |
144850378 | j- This is a precious ftone which, when rough and? |
144850378 | muft he fubmit? |
144850378 | myrtles, lau¬ rel?, a large fpecies of bilberry called uva de ferra,& c. and numberlefs rivulets of the pureft water run p down their Tides. |
144850378 | neque fe fore polthac Tam facilem dicat, votis ut praebeat aurem? |
144850378 | niftiment of Popifti prkfts or Jefuits who fhould be 1778,a< found to teach or officiate in the fervicesof that church;, ertedin the? |
144850378 | of latitude AD- 8- 0.90309 fo is the fecant of the courfe? |
144850378 | or are they only binding, becaufe it is our intereft to be bound by them, or to fulfil them? |
144850378 | or ought they to be attributed to the difference of earths, which in that cafe would be di- llinX and peculiar to each metal? |
144850378 | or what notion have we of a panther ’s Bible? |
144850378 | parts anfwer-? |
144850378 | parts of? |
144850378 | t. With a lead oehre and iron, i?. |
144850378 | the aClor, man, for playing his part in this perplexed and bufy fcene? |
144850378 | the debafed value of the money- unit in the gold coin,, if that fpecies were declared to be the ftandavd? |
144850378 | thetical dodtrine? |
144850378 | this be an arbitrary and a violent revolution in the value of the money- unit, and a debafement of the ftan¬ dard? |
144850378 | to be evacuated from the cavity of the abdomen? |
144850378 | to the fouth, at a league and a half diftance from the Night- AZirri?, ox Incubus. |
144850378 | true gems; but as they are very foft in comparifon to thefe, they are eafily difcovered by means of the file: the com¬ mon quartz- cryftal? |
144850378 | vicar- general, field- marfnal, and governor, of the Mi- Modilhon?. |
144850378 | what charm thy force reftrains? |
144850378 | whence has it all the materials of reafon and knowledge? |
144850378 | where is the potentate who doth not glory in being numbered among our attendants? |
144850378 | where one could not diftinguiih any particular 4 t found? |
144850378 | will that mind be liable to about the Deity? |
144850378 | with their names to the lateft pofterity? |
144850378 | world, is almoft a round ball; it i? |
144850378 | }, Method e? |
144850378 | — — Ilium ex mcenibus hofticis Matrona bellantis tyranni Profpiciens, et adulta virgo, Sufpiret: Eheu, ne rudis agminum? |
144850378 | “ Now where,( continued he), can we find better friends than in brothers? |
144850378 | “ What mean ye, that ye ufe this proverb, The fa¬ thers have eaten four grapes, and the childrens teeth are fet on edge? |
144850378 | •J1 North-7^/? |
190273290 | Trim, when expreffed of the mads, denotes theit? 190273290 $ T U[ 8315] S T U Stmthio Jte purfuer, beats him clown, and treads him to the<-,? 190273290 & rma//nJ? 190273290 ''Azrz< AAif J&A? 190273290 ( feminq tecia) are contained in fome veffel, whether of th? 190273290 (//jy// ss- J? iSry// St/,/«,/ ■ s/ tys/ s/ y/''. 190273290 * re¬ gent, and more conclufive, in proportion as the mufcles in conneftion with this bone are more numerous and ftronger? 190273290 ,? 190273290 -y? 190273290 / •/^-k-/I-/^/^ •V'': Mfrl*; z^''''^i^/:< 32: i^ St>- r-^S\ C''■^ r_/^ 62 9 63^. 190273290 /P i(3 y/,) r c. P/ ■ r —\)? 190273290 0 can? 190273290 1/ f. ✓/ V-rT^rtl- 6^r- 6-/'', f/.s-''** fi t/ •< y^y''y/ zz/-V d5 Z t? 190273290 108 Here the nature of the complaint points out the Of the po- relief, Extenfion is wrong; a ftraight pofition of the ilimb during*h''Sh or leg i3? 190273290 38. o. S1EUR, a title of refpect among the French, like that of? najler among us. 190273290 38? 190273290 39? 190273290 4- ejf/At''^Z''? 190273290 44 G 2 Spies, S8o4\V A R. Part II, Offenfiva Spi''e?, when dlfcovered, fhould not always be punifli- Operations. 190273290 7y<5 K 190273290 8782 W A Defensive Luxemburg, who was on the other fide of the Maefe? 190273290 : —| I/*\^^ if Pi V: m- — i_ — v 1\''-/-; i M- 7 K~ « A 1 y; r\ —~A''Lrl~ 7: 1 r Y^\; A: A1 Z^^:* •^ 1^? |
190273290 | ;/^]^p^ l/* a"* 1 x c^ £.//''? |
190273290 | /fy/ r<; yr r/^/r/ V k/bn? |
190273290 | . |
190273290 | .. |
190273290 | ? 439 fafety and utility of each were equal: which is by Practice, no means the cafe. |
190273290 | ? 6, Braces and pendants. |
190273290 | ? 8 no proof. |
190273290 | ? e, or club- lhaped, as in the papitio, butterfly. |
190273290 | ? i; and afterwards follow the firft, fecond, and third tranfoms; together with the intermediate ones. |
190273290 | ? tethod, “ In preparing the foot for the( hoe, Hale( V LXVH. |
190273290 | ?, are particularly enutnerated under their refpedlive hegds. |
190273290 | ?. |
190273290 | ?/<>/////~. |
190273290 | ?~hu''‘dfr ‘ At the end of 20 years, his fentence of banifhment was revoked. |
190273290 | A defeent may be effe&ed at each face of the two baftions in the front of the attack, as in*?, Plate CCCVII. |
190273290 | A more Ample amber- varnifh, of great ufe for many purpofes, and faid to be the bafis of the fin? |
190273290 | A/A r/"ftysySAy? |
190273290 | ADMIRALTY islands, lie in about 2? |
190273290 | Although it is neceffary to have all chimneys pretty wide, v«t this on many occ&fions is attended with in- cojiy:? |
190273290 | Anciently, when the Romans had far extended their territory, it was the utmoft? lace of banilhment,( Ovid). |
190273290 | And is not the fame inconvenience full as likely to attend the former? |
190273290 | And may they not do the fame in Britain? |
190273290 | And/ he can weep, Sir, weep; Aad/he ’s obedient; as you fay, obedient: Very Sentiment?, SEN Stntiments. |
190273290 | Are not my eyes guilty alike with theirs, That thus can gaze, and yet not turn to ftone? |
190273290 | Are thefe worms only mere ma¬ chines? |
190273290 | As to muff of the fcripture- prophecies, they com¬ prehend fpcb a variety of particulars; they fo minutely defcrib? |
190273290 | At prefent, if a farmer wants to lay down his land to grafs, what does he do? |
190273290 | Atz^A7 1 y/''A y/''AyyA''A yy yoe/ y, yeyyy JfiAy v 6 M A o —''yyzzA qY''ir\^< r i r A ■ c^''° z v o a^>/ V r''-/< r^v( A 9^ N AAA r\ f^ ■? |
190273290 | But Unanimity was wanting; ev£fy one Swede!? |
190273290 | But are we fure that thefe towns, though they have the fame names, occupy alfo the fame fpots of ground with the old ones? |
190273290 | But fuppofing the redoubts to be forced, how would the enemy be able to enter the intervals without dividing? |
190273290 | But how can fuch union be promoted or af- fifted by perforation? |
190273290 | But if thefe fmoother weapons cut fo fore what( hall we fay of open and unbluOiing fcandal fubje&ed to no caution — tied down to noreftraints? |
190273290 | But now the queftion follows, What puniihment can human laws inflift on one who has withdrawn himfelf from their reach? |
190273290 | But the old emperor dying foon after, hi? |
190273290 | But whatever was Swift ’s attachment to Mrs Johnfon, j every precaution was taken to prevent fcandal: they? |
190273290 | But who will deny that Lucretius, Horace, Virgil, Livy, Terence, Tully, are at once the fimplelt and belt of Roman writers? |
190273290 | But why then are they fabled to be deftroyers, and painted in fuch dreadful colours? |
190273290 | Carnrnm? |
190273290 | Cattle, fowl, and filh, “ II1S.? |
190273290 | Charles had foon farther caufe to be fenfible of his-_, II? ‘ obligations to the holy father fpr bringing about the treaty of Nice. |
190273290 | Coriolanus* fpeaking to his mother, What is this? |
190273290 | Could eyes endure to guide fuch cruel hands? |
190273290 | Counterfeit? |
190273290 | Cows and free? |
190273290 | Do not I know thou wouldft? |
190273290 | Do you go back difmay’d? |
190273290 | Does it not feem to you, my friend, but yederday that Nero was upon the throne? |
190273290 | Does it not import the farmer to have good hay and grafs in plenty? |
190273290 | Does the ape imitate us from inclination, or becaufe, without any exertion of the will, he feels the capacity of doing it? |
190273290 | Doft thou underftand me? |
190273290 | E. II? |
190273290 | Et ne fuis- je blanchi dans les travaux guerriers, Que pour voir en un jour fletrir tant de lauriers? |
190273290 | Every thing being prepared to fet fire to the mines, all the grenadiers of the army are ordered to march to tbe affault? |
190273290 | F, Bridges b.? |
190273290 | Faut- il de votre eclat voir triompher le comte, Et mourir fans vengeance, ou vivre dans la honte? |
190273290 | For can we, fays he, form clear and juft notions of our fenfations Me any other way than by refledtion? |
190273290 | Frefh charcoal may be occafionaily fup- plied S T O[ g30?] |
190273290 | From this time to hi? |
190273290 | From what has been faid, we may divide this dif* SS9 j cafe into four general heads or Hates, under which allpejeral,? |
190273290 | Hath your Grace ne’er a brother like you? |
190273290 | He accordingly turned his arms againftIs defeated the king of Navarre, the great difturber of France?,? 7;. |
190273290 | He accordingly turned his arms againftIs defeated the king of Navarre, the great difturber of France?,? 7;. |
190273290 | He was furprifed, but not alarm? |
190273290 | Hence it has been found, that people can live very well on the tops of mountain?, where the barometer finks to 15 or 16 inches. |
190273290 | His army then ap¬ peared too formidable to be oppofed,? nd the prince of N»ffau with count Hoogftrate retired towards the Prince of river Ens. |
190273290 | His pamphlet on the Ulcerous Sore Throat is in every refptA the beft of hjs performances, and owes much of its merit U? |
190273290 | How comes this? |
190273290 | How could you.be Jo cruel to de¬ fer giving me that joy which you knew I muft receive from your prefence? |
190273290 | How( hall your houfelefs heads, and unfed Tides, Your loop’d and window’d raggednefs defend you From feafons fuch as thefe? |
190273290 | I think Ihe itirs again — No — what ’s the belt? |
190273290 | I. E N T O M||of them forward; yet the hard cruft with which they are f"»in inverted, and their( hortnefs in flies and other infefts,^ would indue? |
190273290 | If conquerors fought only in defence of juftice, and to puniffi vice, why ffiould they be fo ftrongly bent upon the deftruc- tion of their enemies? |
190273290 | If the gen who advance to reconnoitre the place? |
190273290 | If this be granted, will it not follow, that fuch pofture of a broken limb mull be the bell for making the reduftion? |
190273290 | In chemifero punto horqui me mena Fortuna? |
190273290 | In effeeft, how could fo many fimilar flints be formed? |
190273290 | In fhort, what are the parts or powers which aft on the bones, and which, by fo afting on them, produce all thefe confequences? |
190273290 | In general, however, the artery chofen1? |
190273290 | In the Hippolytut Euripides,( « |
190273290 | Inhabits Mexico? |
190273290 | Inhabits Siberia; lives in a neft made of lichens, in fome moill place beneath the roots of trees; feeds on feeds; it digs? |
190273290 | Is it likely that fubftances weigh¬ ing in all 55 pounds, fhould yield 1596 pounds of air? |
190273290 | Is it not furprifing that this philofophical paradox fhould have hitherto efcaped unnoticed? |
190273290 | Is it the violence done to the bone, and through it to the membrane, which caufes the inflammation and fuppuration? |
190273290 | Is not the great caufe of mifeondufk among mditary men the want of encouragement to excite emulation? |
190273290 | Is there any book in the world fo perfe&ly ad¬ apted to all capacities? |
190273290 | Is there any thing in nature fo ffiort and limited as hu¬ man life even in its mod extended period? |
190273290 | Is this wonderful reprodu&ion of parts only a natural confequence of the laws of motion? |
190273290 | It feems to have been call¬ ed by the Britons 1/71?, the diminutive of U''iz, which fignifies an ifland. |
190273290 | It is about 5S? |
190273290 | It is apparent that their( hining light depends? |
190273290 | It is faid that Vandyck ’s mother was paflionately fond of em? |
190273290 | It maybe fplit into numerous fine plates or leaves? |
190273290 | La douceur de fa voix, fon enfance, fa grace, Font infenfiblement a mon inimitie Succeder Je ferois fenfible a la pitie? |
190273290 | Line penult, fomrfflV, read mWi?. |
190273290 | May not this oil fail when applied againft the bite of fome of the European fpecies of ferpents? |
190273290 | N.\ — I — I-^^1\ •/ •^ —-ZL-\\ Y —.r A^in A:/"‘ O> 1\ c-^ A{~^ Y •''-''p — w — 0 y? |
190273290 | Nettle: THU r 8606 1 THU read iW///!? |
190273290 | Next to him are fix other fubordinate vifier?, called vifters of the bench; who officiate as his counfeliors or affeffors in the divan. |
190273290 | Nor hallow’d dirge be mutter’d o’er thy tomb? |
190273290 | Nothing could be tnore complete tire? |
190273290 | Now, as it will often happen among mountains that there is not a foot of earth, how then can redoubts be, ere£led there? |
190273290 | N’ai- je done tant vecu que pour cette infamie? |
190273290 | O, very mad, exceeding mad, in love too? |
190273290 | Of SEN[ 8094] SEN Sentiment?. |
190273290 | Of the new The new method, or apparatus magnus? |
190273290 | Of this laft perform¬ ance, however, he has only completed the four firft book? |
190273290 | OfTenfiW In a word, the attack of an army on its march 0Pcratl °? |
190273290 | On the morning of that day his fervant, came into his bed- chamber, and afked him what fort of a night he had had? |
190273290 | Or is thp mifehief which may be incurred by mere perforation of the fkull, equal to the good which it may produce? |
190273290 | Other feeming conneftions from the fame caufe: Will you employ your conqu’ring fword, To break a fiddle and your word? |
190273290 | P O I[ 0136] POL Pleafure the other, but for the fenfation of pleafure and pain? |
190273290 | Pepin having quarrelled with Nice- phorus the Greek emperor, and finding Obelerio the Venetian doge inclined to favour his adverfary, i |
190273290 | Per theorem 3. the fame mode.26*=—=? |
190273290 | Pififtratus having made himfelf matter of Athens, Solon retired into Lydia, where, Crcefus having afited him on a time if he did not think him happy? |
190273290 | Purfue and overtake the wings of time? |
190273290 | Q/ a*u/68a4 v? |
190273290 | Quel prodige nouveau me trouble et m’etn- barraffe? |
190273290 | River? |
190273290 | S W E land, and Baking 5 Lyfter, anti Huwen, the iflc of Sweden? |
190273290 | SEVERUS( Septimius), a Roman emperor, born? « t Leptis in Africa. |
190273290 | SOL, in mufic, the fifth note of the gammut, lit, re,? m, fa, fol, la. |
190273290 | See Helm.—Thehelmfman fhould diligently watch the movements of the head by the land? |
190273290 | See KviGHT-&xf/ V(?. |
190273290 | Shall( he come in? |
190273290 | Sheppy Ifland,? |
190273290 | Si tota eft Hcrculis Oete, Et juga tota vacant Bromio Nyfeia; quare Unus in EgyptoMagno lapis? |
190273290 | Soon after the reduftion of Haarlem, Alva, per¬ ceiving that his feverity anfwered no other purpofe United? |
190273290 | Spring-7Vi/(?. |
190273290 | Stern- Po/?, along ftraight piece of timber ereded on the extremity of the keel, to fuftain the rudder Stern*''i and terminate the( hip behind. |
190273290 | Stood the llrength of car- borne Ofcar? |
190273290 | Strat?. |
190273290 | Swimmers very often perifh by them; fometimes SqUafu?. |
190273290 | T4VR Tir''‘ UT? |
190273290 | TALIO^/,? |
190273290 | TETRANDRIA, « four, ” and « »? |
190273290 | TbOTH- drawing, according to Cicero,(/) |
190273290 | That degree of elevation which is taken by voices or inflrnments for performing a piece of mufic, is like-, wife called the/ ot? |
190273290 | That elegant fpecies of( hell called the junquil- cbai? |
190273290 | That he ought to have fuch or fuch a quality, in fuch or fuch a cir- cumftance? |
190273290 | The Abdominales, have the&?/$/- fins placed behind the pettoralfins.—This order contains 17 genera, viz. |
190273290 | The Chinefe monkey,(/ |
190273290 | The Ruffian ambaffador made a truce only for two^’jj? |
190273290 | The Swedifti^^^1^ tained a variety of other important advantages, when army, accuftomed only to be obedient to Bannier, be- ” ut jDeatt? |
190273290 | The Turks call it Beez, the natives IVien? |
190273290 | The beccabringa, or common brook- lira?, found in ditches and rivulets. |
190273290 | The body which fets out laft fhould never be more than half a league before th? |
190273290 | The confequence of this was a revolt; and? |
190273290 | The diffemination of plants refpeft? |
190273290 | The duty on hackney- coaches and chair?. |
190273290 | The fecundity of plapt? |
190273290 | The firft Greek furgeons on gery of the record are iEfculapiu?, and his fons Podalirius and ancient Machaon. |
190273290 | The flioal of privateers went by the general name of gueux, or feci* beggeirs? |
190273290 | The inconveniences which attended thefe limited and fettered inheritance? |
190273290 | The leaves ar*^ e? |
190273290 | The leaves of young trees and of new( hoots are much larger, and lefs cut and ramified, than thofe of a grown tree of th? |
190273290 | The one, invented by Dr Alfton, is, by throwing into the water Impregna- Water? |
190273290 | The thread? |
190273290 | The two promontories that forn? |
190273290 | The tyrant, perceiving he had another arrow concealed under his cloak, aiked him for what pur- pofe? |
190273290 | The whole dependence of Antiochus in the firft attack was on his armed cha- io? |
190273290 | The? |
190273290 | Thefe finufes, if they continue to drain a great while, grow hard in the- furface of their cavity; and then are termed fijlul- e? |
190273290 | Then how can any man be faid To break an oath he never made? |
190273290 | There are nine fpecies, the moil remarkable of which is the ianternari?. |
190273290 | Theriac was in for¬ mer times, and dill is with fome pra&itioners, a very Part IT.1 common application in every cafe of gangrene; but, Theory? |
190273290 | They have but fallen before us; for, one day we muft fall.—Why doft thou build the hall, fon of the winged days? |
190273290 | They imme-? r diately began to negociate; and as Henry VIII. |
190273290 | They ought alfo to? |
190273290 | They run!,, He i eagerly afked who ran? |
190273290 | They were celebrated in the temple of Tejlus, where foie pin facriflce? |
190273290 | This city had its name from the fituation of its abbey, anciently called a? ninj}er, in refpedt of that of St Paul. |
190273290 | Thouga the Hump be now apparently well bound, yet, by rea- fon of the form of the thigh, the bands may be apt to loofen, or ever? |
190273290 | Thus the high- eft is called the nuing- tranfom} the next, the deck- tranfo? |
190273290 | To begin the tracing of the trenches, tie to thd picket G a cord of the length GS, and to the fame picket another cord of the length GX: let there b? |
190273290 | To- ward? |
190273290 | Two aids- de- camp that fought near him were killed; his horfe was killed,? s was alfo an equerry while he pre- fented another. |
190273290 | VOCAL, iomething that relate? |
190273290 | Was he mad, Sir? |
190273290 | Was it not rather an in- ftance of the good fortune which ufually attended that intrepid prince? |
190273290 | We are unacquainted with the means by which hie ac- complifned this extraordinary operation; but it? |
190273290 | We come now to fpeak of compound fradtures, or* 2? |
190273290 | Weighed only! — But was it confidered, that this gas muft have been the produce of no more than 50 pounds of ftraw and 5 pounds of wool? |
190273290 | Were there no pleafure in eating, nor pain in hunger, what numbers would be ftarved through ne¬ gligence, forgetfulnefs, or floth? |
190273290 | What an idea does this give of the wealth of the inhabitants of Venice? |
190273290 | What art and what genius is there not requifite to maintain this fub¬ ordination? |
190273290 | What fliall become of me now? |
190273290 | What is it indu¬ ces people to the office of generation, but pleafure? |
190273290 | What muft be the confeqoence, theti, if thoufands of tons of materials equally prolific in fuch kinds of air are melted at once? |
190273290 | What new- found witchcraft was in thee, With thine own cold to kindle me? |
190273290 | What other are the foregoing inftancts but defcribing the paffion another feels? |
190273290 | What then is the reafon why frac¬ tured bones always fuffer a greater or a lefs degree of difplacement? |
190273290 | What wife? |
190273290 | What wilt thou do when riot is thy care? |
190273290 | What would you with her, Sir? |
190273290 | When jntt caught, it pricks the fliin if it is taken in the bare hands? |
190273290 | Where( hould Othello go? |
190273290 | Wherein lay the merit of''fuch an aftion? |
190273290 | Who can controul his fate? |
190273290 | Who does not know that bravery, courage, and comprehen- fion, are ufelef;, and often fatal, to a military man who wants knowledge of his bufmefs? |
190273290 | Who, I, my lord? |
190273290 | Why had not Offian the ftrength of thy foul? |
190273290 | Will it not be more co-^? |
190273290 | Will you be faithful to me, as your forefathers were to Gullavus Vafa and Guftavus Adolphus? |
190273290 | Will you have me, Lady? |
190273290 | Would a Scythian have been civilized by the Athenian ftage, or a Hottentot by the drawing- room of Charles II.? |
190273290 | Would you produce fuch ftrains as are moving and tender? |
190273290 | Would you produce the gay and the cheerful? |
190273290 | Would you produce the majeflic, the grave? |
190273290 | X. J things as the objeds of fenfation, and the operations Mea?. |
190273290 | X. firing cannon or fmall arms; by artificial fire- works; Signal?, and by lanthorns. |
190273290 | Yet gold is generally efteemed indiflbluble by air, being never found to contrad ruft, though ex? |
190273290 | Your knees tome? |
190273290 | \ l A As/? |
190273290 | \s rn- finp AH • raHino •? |
190273290 | ^ — 3-> •-\ —^"\ C-( I A-H- 4\ C. w? |
190273290 | ^9/*Exegesis awi M*? |
190273290 | ^V[c''~?-^2^.%-C,-nk''c u-\V<- JTj^( LS^Gl.r^T- v c3^T<>-^ v v, 2^ 1,^''5''//^N-V r 4.4-*? |
190273290 | and does not experience too often prove this to be the cafe? |
190273290 | and that he is not always obliged to have both at the fame time? |
190273290 | and will cattle thrive equally on all forts of food? |
190273290 | and, Whether this or that hero?s fame was well founded? |
190273290 | but what( hall I gain by drinking it late? |
190273290 | crumble in pieces at laft; the pot is then taken from the fire, and the water in it well ftirred about, that the cakes may mix with it; this i? |
190273290 | de j THE[ 8576] THE Thebe?, defence. |
190273290 | doe8 not the diftant reparation of the edges imply greater reparation of the attaching veflels of the dura mater? |
190273290 | eyyy\ aAAA''uzrA.ayA P>-> y/ ry/ t/^ yyyy ‘: tY?/\ zte^y j l eA.ecA.tA^y) tyyytytA 9 Ay/ ry''yyr^y, sy//// A/ y-yy Ar/ Vy/ ytSYT Ar/ y. |
190273290 | great degree of force being neceffary for compref- fing the fides of arteries into clofe contaff with on? |
190273290 | how well calculated they were to anfwer the ends for which they were built, and for how many ages they have refill¬ ed the rag? |
190273290 | in each, but that each contains as many''fouls as there are pieces capable of reproducing perfeft animals? |
190273290 | io6 By this they hope to avoid the fymptoms which are This me- fuppofed to be generally excited by the divifion of thetho''? |
190273290 | it can know any thing of the matter: fome parties0Perat‘011? |
190273290 | jtr/ t.s y/ tAy?'' |
190273290 | l8? |
190273290 | lot The king of France took advantage of the empe- J7rancis.at''''I? |
190273290 | mutes, dwarf?, and buffoons. |
190273290 | no more moving? |
190273290 | of the feed.-ypfTelj gs in the crpfsrfhgped and peg- bioorq flower? |
190273290 | or are they, like more perfeft animals, a fort of compound, the fprings of whofe motions are a£tu- ated or regulated by a fort of foul? |
190273290 | or is it the loofened or feparated date of the broken part? |
190273290 | or is there not fome neceffary obfervations omitted in the formula delivered, either refpe&ing the medicine or the pa¬ tient? |
190273290 | poor wenches, where are now your fortunes? |
190273290 | prince Tnomas was obliged finally to take up his abode Conftanti- Under the articleCoNstanTtNOPLE, n ° i I5,i? |
190273290 | r » «-A~''■ ’ j-.n~ — A ’ r\ a 1^^ t-I A3? |
190273290 | sY/''/ryyA? |
190273290 | si4~~* The general criterion of the fitnefs of catara&s for Different the operation is taken from their colour: the pearl- co*our 01? |
190273290 | t ‘//Yf/ y/ s// y try, rAtry ty. A/ y^y?/**. |
190273290 | tYJtv///''V M i r i j/i''1 n ay//ty>/?/, Qot/,j//4 yytb t?//< 9.j/''tyy.t/ y.r/ Ayy.yAyyAy?'' |
190273290 | that here only bravery is neceflary, there only courage? |
190273290 | the different methods or vehicles by whiph natpre has contrived to difperfe their feed? |
190273290 | to your corre&ed fon? |
190273290 | ty/ nty? |
190273290 | valve? |
190273290 | were’t good? |
190273290 | what creates the refiftance which we always find in attempting to bring the fra&ured parts aptly together? |
190273290 | what trea¬ chery? |
190273290 | which way fliall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite defpair? |
190273290 | why is a broken limb almod always Ihorter than its fellow? |
190273290 | y/ ryZ''< y>/"? |
190273290 | yet how is it much lefs abfurd to do what is equivalent in relation to graffes? |
190273290 | £/•- rata, when the exterior margin towards the apex is notched or ferrated, as in fome of the bupreftes. |
190273290 | — — Can you raife the dead? |
190273290 | “ Did thy beauty laft, O Ryno? |
190273290 | “ The quantity of matter, therefore, in a given fpace, maybe diminifhed by rarefaftion: and why may not it be diminifhed in infinitum? |
190273290 | “ The realons which fliould induce a general to give battle, are, ” according to Mr de Feuquiere^, “ hi? |
190273290 | “ What bufinefs, think you, can I have had time to do? |
144850379 | ( hall I not admire him? |
144850379 | ( hall all things yield returns but love? |
144850379 | 56.16 OPT Mcehanifm haul parts, and raequalities, that he can find; then''°? |
144850379 | 5675 if I fhould deny that ever I fent you that letter? |
144850379 | 6045 they are altnoft crifp; then prefs out the oil, let it Prepara- ftand to fettle, and afterwards pour it off from the tlon?'' |
144850379 | 6256 f Or the ifi page"4 Or the sth page"fs!s M S? i’4 binder will attend to this direction, as pages jjd? |
144850379 | 6256 f Or the ifi page"4 Or the sth page"fs!s M S? i’4 binder will attend to this direction, as pages jjd? |
144850379 | 6291 field; but who could kill the mighty Comal? |
144850379 | 6296 POE The three ed to the fubje&? |
144850379 | 77; |
144850379 | ? |
144850379 | ? 3!15^!, |
144850379 | ? 719 parent will pardon me, if I can any longer ftudy? |
144850379 | ? 719 parent will pardon me, if I can any longer ftudy? |
144850379 | ? d to the teaching philofophy, which at that time was the moft honourable profeffion there. |
144850379 | ? don5»a 395* Aromatic tinfture. |
144850379 | ?, Here Cicero ends his narrative. |
144850379 | A little fpirit may be added to the other animal- fubftances, if the weather is very hot, and large 33 2 TJan “ 6025 Element?. |
144850379 | A word What is that word ho~ “ nour ” Air; a trim reckoning.—Who hath it? |
144850379 | According of Cyrus? |
144850379 | Adjoin the virgin, and''tis frown on gravis f? |
144850379 | Again: Oh fay- what ftranger caufe, yet unexplor’d, Could make a gentle belle rejedt a lord? |
144850379 | Alfo let the apparent meridian altitude of fome other ftar, obfer¬ ved near the equator, be 30 ® 40'', and its declination 40 ° 9''? |
144850379 | Alfred, f Sir John Baliol, father to the king1? |
144850379 | Am I to live or die? |
144850379 | And are the abfurdities of madmen proper fubjecls either of amufement or of imitation to reafonable beings? |
144850379 | And fo when Medea fays, I could fave; and do you aft) if I can defray? |
144850379 | And fwim to yonder point? — Upon the word, Accoutred as I was, I plunged in, And bid him follow; fo indeed he did. |
144850379 | And if you fear cenfure; which is moft to be dreaded, that which may arife from juftice and fortitude, or from cowardice and treachery? |
144850379 | And in life ’s ftead to leave us nought but death? |
144850379 | And in that exprefiion of Cicero, Words move nobody but him who un? |
144850379 | And is there magic but what dwells in love? |
144850379 | And tell how many hearts his bounteous virtue s blefs? |
144850379 | And the load prefleth as our days prevail? |
144850379 | And vanquilh’d realms fupply recording gold? |
144850379 | And what could be expeded from a barbarous age, and from authors that were even below a moderate capacity? |
144850379 | And what, faid( he, does this bold painter mean? |
144850379 | And will not a ridge made a little rounding, throw off the water much better than a flat ridge? |
144850379 | And will this woman dare to come out of thofe doors, and talk of the force of poifon? |
144850379 | And yet who does not perceive how flat and languid fuch a way of talking muft have appeared at that time? |
144850379 | And, laftly, an argu¬ ment might alfo be fetched from the nature of the thing itfelf in the following manner: That Cicero by? |
144850379 | Are they Ifraelites? |
144850379 | Are they the feed of Abraham? |
144850379 | Are we condemn’d by fate ’s unjuft decree, No more our houfes and our homes to fee? |
144850379 | Are you not fenfible what diforders for¬ tune occa lions every where? |
144850379 | As if I aflc a perfon, Where he is going? |
144850379 | As to the fird, privilege of fpeech, it is declared by the ftatute x W. Sc M. ft. 2. c. 2. as one of tb? |
144850379 | As when Cicero fays, “ Catiline, how long will you abufe our patience? |
144850379 | As: “ He is gone, but by a gain¬ ful remove, from painful labour, to quiet reft; from un- quiet defirescontentment, yruzK forrow,/ |
144850379 | Balbus( fays he) be condemned, without condemning Marius for a like faft? |
144850379 | Being allied, if he did not intend to fill it up: No, faid he; do not you fee that my leaving it empty is what precifely conftitutes the picture? |
144850379 | Boil them untfl the falts? re diffolved, then filter the liquor, and add an ounce of oil of vitrij1. |
144850379 | But before what court{ hall this im¬ peachment be tried? |
144850379 | But figures of fentences are the rnofl confiderable, and principally contribute to make up thi? |
144850379 | But fincej''i? |
144850379 | But how can you make it out? |
144850379 | But how if Honour prick me off, when I “ come on? |
144850379 | But pray why fhould I not have defended him? |
144850379 | But tell me, Tityrug, what heav’nly pow’r Paftoral Preferv’d your fortunes in that fatal hour? |
144850379 | But what is Poetry? |
144850379 | But where, it may £ aid, is this pattern of perfedtion to be found? |
144850379 | But who can number ev’ry fandy grain Wafil’d by Sicilia''s hoarfe- refounding main? |
144850379 | But why am I averfe to peace?, Becaufe it is bafe, becaufe it is dangerous, and becaufe it is imprafticable. |
144850379 | But will it not live with the living? |
144850379 | But, O Melpomene, for whom Awakes thy golden fhtll again? |
144850379 | By means of a dove- tail flit it can be moved up Optical ancj down, jjj we finci tiie p0fition of the fpeculum is.? |
144850379 | By the hand- writing? |
144850379 | Can Honour fet a leg? |
144850379 | Can I fay the people were not told of it? |
144850379 | Can I re- Elocution, move an opinion fo deeply and long rooted in the~ minds of men? |
144850379 | Can any thing be told in a more plain and Ample manner than this? |
144850379 | Can it be right then t © come into that, as if it was written, which it would be a crime to write? |
144850379 | Can love itfelf endure? |
144850379 | Can wealth, or grandeur, fatisfy the mind? |
144850379 | Captain Cook then allied if the plaintain were for the Eatua? |
144850379 | Co. And can there, Tbenot, be a greater ill? |
144850379 | Colin, here the place, whofe pleafant fight From other( hades hath yean’d my wand’ring mind; Tell me, what wants me here, to work delight? |
144850379 | Could fuch figures and combinations give pleafure, or merit the appel¬ lation of fublime or beautiful? |
144850379 | Dear Chloe, how blubber’d is that pretty face? |
144850379 | Did all I had read and( ludied avail nothing? |
144850379 | Did he drive away the tribune, who oppofed the paffing a law? |
144850379 | Did he take''pofieffion of a temple by force of arms? |
144850379 | Did he think he could eafily leffen me in the fenate? |
144850379 | Did we for thefe barbarians plant and fow,} On thefe, on thefe, our happy fields beftow? |
144850379 | Did we not all in a manner engage ourfelves by oath, to have the fame friends, and the fame enemies, which you had? |
144850379 | Dirpofition any law? |
144850379 | Do lovers dream, or is my Delia kind? |
144850379 | Do not they excite, redrain, prove, admire, and fhame? |
144850379 | Do not they exprefs joy, Pmnuncia- forrow, doubt, confeffion, penitence, meafure, plenty, number, and time? |
144850379 | Do not you perceive your defigns are difeo- vered, and that all who are prefent know of your con- fpracy? |
144850379 | Do they ever trouble their heads about fuch niceties? |
144850379 | Do you bewail the lofs of moft emi¬ nent citizens? |
144850379 | Do you confider the difficulty of"managing a public caufe? ” With much more to the fame purpofe. |
144850379 | Do you fear the cenfure of pofterity? |
144850379 | Does there one fmiliug hour my youth attend? |
144850379 | Doth he feel it? |
144850379 | E. Take of palm oil? |
144850379 | Enemies? |
144850379 | Ethiops? nineral. |
144850379 | Feet,( pedes), in all land- birds that perch, have Part? ‘ a large back toe: moft of them have three toes forward, and one backward. |
144850379 | For the piece of eight, or piadre, fee Money- Ttf/’/. |
144850379 | For to whom elfe is it owing, that thofe who endeavoured to plcafe you, ad- drefled themfelves to Philotas? |
144850379 | For what could be a larger and more copious fubjed, than for me to fpeak for myfelf againft Anthony? |
144850379 | For what muft; I fay? |
144850379 | For who can be thought fo well qualified to give the rules of any art, as he who excelled all mankind in the pra&ice of them? |
144850379 | For, as Horace has juftly obferved, All human works( hall wafte, Then how can feeble words pretend to laft? |
144850379 | From henpe therefore this fubordinate queftion follows: Whether Clodius ajfajfinated Milo? |
144850379 | From thy lov’d home, and led thy heart aftray? |
144850379 | Go, gentle gales, and bear my fighs awayl Come, Delia, come; ah, why this long delay? |
144850379 | Had I never feen nor heard any thing in my whole life? |
144850379 | Has Cornelius car¬ ried any law contrary to the omens? |
144850379 | Has he a{ faulted the conful? |
144850379 | Has he pillaged the ftate? |
144850379 | Has he plunder¬ ed the treafury? |
144850379 | Has he thrown contempt upon religion? |
144850379 | He alked him then how he came to think of this? |
144850379 | He allied him what he was doing? |
144850379 | He was then afked if towtows, who had no hogs, dogs, or fowls, but yet were good men, were ever facrificed to the Eatua? |
144850379 | Hence the Phoenicians gave the name ofphesnix to the palm- tree; becaufe when burnt downt Phols?'' |
144850379 | Hence they gave Mercury the titles of Aoj/ j ®- and both which names come words that fignify “ to fpeak. ” And Ariftides call? |
144850379 | Here the membrane? |
144850379 | Here, rifmg bold, the patriot ’s honeft face; There, warriors frowning in hiftoric brafs? |
144850379 | Honour hath no Ikill in furgery then? |
144850379 | How Difpofniou will you prove it? |
144850379 | How canft thou prefume thou haft leave to deftroy The beauties which Venus but lent to thy keeping? |
144850379 | How eafy the tranfition, at any time, from the draught to the original, from the fhadow to the fubftance? |
144850379 | How far diftant are foliloquies generally from thefe models? |
144850379 | How few now underftand the remaining fragments of the twelve tables? |
144850379 | How fuccinfl, Elocution, and yet how majeftic, is that exprefiion of Caefar upon his vidory over Pharnaces? |
144850379 | How is it poflible, for inftance, to know whe¬ ther the phlogillon in fpirit of wine be exa&Iy the fame with that in fulphur? |
144850379 | How long will your fury infult us? |
144850379 | How wilt thou now the fatal liders move? |
144850379 | How-ob¬ ferved in the day- time, n ° 93/S''#? |
144850379 | I whom you call’d/ szw* Dear, your Love, fo late, Say, am I now the objeX of your hate? |
144850379 | I will not afk, when you ever gave a proof''of it; but when you fo much as attempted it? |
144850379 | If it be allied, Which is the propereft time for thefe ftudies? |
144850379 | If the fun is 20 ° high, then P will be 20 |
144850379 | If then I be a father, ’ where is mine honour? |
144850379 | If there needs mult be a reformation, why not reltore the ancient chorus and the ancient continuity of adlion? |
144850379 | If they facrificed to the Eatua hogs, dogs, fowls,& e.? |
144850379 | If we had in Iroquois, books like thofe which we have in Englilh, Italian, French, and German,( hould we not be tempted to learn that language? |
144850379 | If we look into the different ages of the La¬ tin writers, what great alterations and changes do we find in their language? |
144850379 | In the laft drying, 6087 6o8$ P H A R Prepara- drying, the heat muft not be fo great as to melt it; riQn?. |
144850379 | Into the capitol? |
144850379 | Is it infenfible then? |
144850379 | Is it not Colinet I lonefome fee Leaning with folded arms againft the tree? |
144850379 | Is it to be feared how the city would bear this a&ion? |
144850379 | Is the authority of this order weakened? |
144850379 | Is there one joy fincere, that will not tire? |
144850379 | Is this a fair contelt? |
144850379 | It is divided into four parts, three of which are forti¬ fied; but the other is only a fuburb, and ha? |
144850379 | It is elfewhere obferved*, that the fentiments ought*? e.e ‘*! e to be tuned to the paffion, and the language to both. |
144850379 | Its terri¬ tory, whidi is very irregular, may be divided into 4? |
144850379 | L. Soften ftorax calamita in hot water; then prefs it out betwixt warm iron plates; and feparat? |
144850379 | Manner of The broiler fhquld be made of thick flout brafs like brutfcrgthe^h? |
144850379 | Nay, how many words do we meet with even in Plautus, the meaning of which has not yet been fixed with certain¬ ty by the fkill of the bell critics? |
144850379 | Need I men¬ tion to you princes who had been extremely happy had a more timely death fecured them from impend¬ ing evils? |
144850379 | Neither is The Way of the World entirely guiltlefs of fuch fcene?. |
144850379 | Nineteen of thefe accents are alfo called, by grammarians, dijlitiftivi or accentus regii; and the others conjunftivi, fervi, or? ni- titflri. |
144850379 | No, thefe, all thefe, are your doings? ” Such an unexpe&ed re¬ turn is fometimes of great fervice to abate the confi¬ dence of an adverfary. |
144850379 | Now in making feveral obfervations upon the fun, and fome others upon the moon and ftars, they feemed to our author to bifedt th? |
144850379 | Now, why do hiftorians take the liberty to embel- lifh their works in this manner? |
144850379 | Now; what news, my Charmion? |
144850379 | Of thefe terminations^/ is mafculine; and as, is, and Pavia''ne, feminine: des and? ie are of the firft declenfion, as and is of the third. |
144850379 | Oh when( hall Britain, confcious of her claim, Stand emulous of Greek and Roman fame? |
144850379 | Or am I dead? |
144850379 | Or bear’d not lark and linnet jointly fing, Their notes blithe- warbling to falute the fpring? |
144850379 | Or is it age of late bedims my fight? |
144850379 | Or what is fo neceffary as to be always furnifhed with arms to guard yourfelf, affertyour right, or repel injuries? |
144850379 | Or why( hould they impofe a new name on this people only, when they give their proper name to every other tribe which they have occafion to fpeak of? |
144850379 | Or “ an arm? |
144850379 | Or( hall we mount again the rural throne, And rule the country, kingdoms once our own? |
144850379 | Or, by what means can we be afeertained that it is the fame principle which gives the fplendor to metals that caufes bodies emit a flame? |
144850379 | Or, footh to fay, did’ft thou not hither rome In fearch of gains more plenty than at home? |
144850379 | P H A R Prepara- a quarter of white fugar, fo as to make it into a fy- tion? ‘ rup without boiling. |
144850379 | P PAP[ 5852 1 PAT? |
144850379 | Pan came, and aflt’d, what magic caus’d my fmart, Or what ill eyes malignant glances dart? |
144850379 | Part II Companion is made three ways: for either a thing Iiventk? |
144850379 | Part II, POE Of Lyric poet who would excel in thi? |
144850379 | Plant- Z,/ci?, Vine- fret ter5, or Pucerons. |
144850379 | Pleas’d Cupid heard, and check’d his mother ’s pride: And who ’s blind now, mamma? |
144850379 | Pleurez[ 5904 1 Paffion?,''PAS Paflions. |
144850379 | Rode he on Barbary? |
144850379 | Say, is my form difpleafing to your fight? |
144850379 | Say, is not abfence death to thofe who love? |
144850379 | See Money- T''^/i?. |
144850379 | Shall I call you citizens, who have revolted from your country? |
144850379 | Shall I deny the fcandal thrown upon him of bribing the judges? |
144850379 | Shall I go home? |
144850379 | Should we have refufed to take this, which you as it were propofed to us? |
144850379 | Should we hefitate to pronounce their author mad? |
144850379 | Singing their great Creator? — — Par. |
144850379 | Slander we- ftiepherds count the vileft wrong t And what wounds forer than an evil tongue? |
144850379 | So likewife in his fecond Philippic, where he fays, “ What can I think? |
144850379 | Soldiers, who have difowned the authority of your general, and broke your military oath? |
144850379 | Some hope? |
144850379 | Sour every fweet, and mix with tears his wine? |
144850379 | Species, t. The orientalis, oriental or eaftern plane- Platanu?. |
144850379 | Sprightly wit, or noble birth? |
144850379 | Sweet are thy banks; oh, when( hall I once more, With ravilh’d eyes review thine amell’d( bore? |
144850379 | TYw/ aa? |
144850379 | That 1 wanted the fupport of good and honeft men? |
144850379 | That I feared being called to an account by the people? |
144850379 | That I fled from a confciouf- nefs of guilt? |
144850379 | That I was afraid of death? |
144850379 | That every fcene in tragedy muft be in blank verfe? |
144850379 | That mourn beneath the gliding fail? |
144850379 | The Captain then afked if any Earees were? |
144850379 | The Duke of York afterwards parcelled them out to under proprietor? |
144850379 | The Jews live in a di-? goma. |
144850379 | The Parthian general, perceiving, as he approached Craf¬ fus, tfut he was on foot, cried out, in a feeming fur- prize, “ What do I fee? |
144850379 | The better prepared perfons are to confider truth, and aft upon the evidence of it, the T? |
144850379 | The cuftom of ouranceftors? |
144850379 | The fenate knows this, the eonful fees it; and yet this man lives!—-lives? |
144850379 | The feparated 6022 P H A R Element?. |
144850379 | The grand queftion therefore to be argued is: Whether or not he killed his father? |
144850379 | The hole at B is made for feeing animal? |
144850379 | The laws relating to the punifhment of Roman citizens? |
144850379 | The piece, you think, is incorreft? |
144850379 | The? |
144850379 | Thefe priefts are profeffedly the men of fcience? |
144850379 | Then why does Cuddy leave his cott fo rearf? |
144850379 | They followed a? |
144850379 | This is done fometimes for greater emphafis, as when we fay, Where in the world is he? |
144850379 | This natural plainnefs and fimplicity, with¬ out any difguife or affeCtation, very much contributes jl? |
144850379 | This too the tranflator loftens by a tropical expreflion? |
144850379 | Thus when Cicero fays: “ What, Tubero, did your drawn fword do in the Pharfalian battle? |
144850379 | Thy cloudy look, why melting into tears, Unfeemly, now the fliy fo bright appears? |
144850379 | Ti? |
144850379 | To die is to be banifh’d from myfelf: And Sylvia is myfelf: banifh’dfrom her, Is felf from felf; a deadly banifhment? |
144850379 | Unthankful lad, when all things fmile around? |
144850379 | Vainly figh, and vainly grieve? |
144850379 | Was I fo unexperienced, fo ignorant, fo void of reafon and prudence? |
144850379 | Was it not ftrange, faid the Scythian Anacharfis, that the Grecian artifts were never judged i by artifts, their peers? |
144850379 | Was life defirable, when all my friends were in fuch forrow, and myfelf in fo great diftrefs, deprived of all the gifts both of nature and fortune? |
144850379 | We came to Branno, friend of ftrangers; Branno of the found- “ ing mail. — ‘ From whence, ’ he faid, ‘ are the arms** of fteel? |
144850379 | We have a beautiful in- ftance of it in St Paul, when he fays: “ Are they Hebrews? |
144850379 | We have hitherto fpoken of the points on the hin¬ der part of the drop, where the rays pafs out of it? |
144850379 | We mean, that what diftinguifhes/wr? |
144850379 | We proceed to the paufe that concludes the line; and the queftion is, Whether the fame rules be applicable to both? |
144850379 | Well, and did I then avoid it? |
144850379 | What I have faid? |
144850379 | What a boundlefs field of invention is here? |
144850379 | What bounds will you fet to your unbridled rage? |
144850379 | What can I do now? |
144850379 | What can be faid either worthy of him, of new to you, or which every one has not heard? |
144850379 | What effefts might not juftly be experfted from fuch an inftitution? |
144850379 | What fay’ft thou, boy? |
144850379 | What fiiould I do? |
144850379 | What fincere and honeft mind can bear this? |
144850379 | What great occafion call’d you hence to Rome? |
144850379 | What his opinion< was touching the event of the battle? |
144850379 | What is the true notion of an epifode? |
144850379 | What joy to hear the tempeft howl in vain, And clafp a fearful miftrefs to my bread? |
144850379 | What mortal breath fhall e’er prefurne To echo that unbounded ftrain? |
144850379 | What prefent( hall the mufe to Dorfet bring, Or how, fo near the pole, attempt to fing? |
144850379 | What prevents you? |
144850379 | What remains, what impreffions, what diffe¬ rence or diftin&ion, do you fee in this mafs of fire? |
144850379 | What room for defeription, compa- rifon, and poetical fable? |
144850379 | What tho ’ in folemn filence all Move round the dark terreftrial ball? |
144850379 | What tho ’ nor real voice or found Amid their radiant orb be found? |
144850379 | What was to he done in this cafe? |
144850379 | When taken warm n ■ bed? |
144850379 | When that my care could not with- hold thy riots, What wilt thou do when riot is thy care? |
144850379 | When was I bathing thus, and naked feen? |
144850379 | When( hall I fee my hut, the fmall abode Myfelf did raife and cover o’er with fod? |
144850379 | When, in the crydal of thy waters, lean Each feature faded, and my colour wan? |
144850379 | Whence came it? |
144850379 | Whence can it rife, but from the fober pow’r Of Constancy? |
144850379 | Whence does thisfudden luftre rife, That gilds the grove? |
144850379 | Whence is this rage? — what fpirit, fay, To battle''hurries me away? |
144850379 | Whence is this rage? — what fpirit, fay, To battle''hurries me away? |
144850379 | Where are my friends? |
144850379 | Where are now the great empires of the world, and their great imperial cities? |
144850379 | Where art thou, my love? |
144850379 | Where in my folding arms you lay reclin’d? |
144850379 | Where is that concern, that ardour, which ufed to extort pity even from children? |
144850379 | Where then fhall we apply for a folution of this intricate problem, which feems to penetrate deep into human nature? |
144850379 | Whether it be properly facrilege? |
144850379 | Whether they can be feparated by a paufe from the words that make them fignificant? |
144850379 | Whe¬ ther our model be or be not a real improvement? |
144850379 | Which way, for example, can the meafures of trees in general be determined, as we determine thofe of the human bo¬ dy? |
144850379 | Who at one time was more acceptable to the beft men, and who more intimate with the word? |
144850379 | Who can account for the diffe¬ rent reds feen in different clouds, at the very moment that thefe reds receive the light but in one place? |
144850379 | Who can doubt, that he has been led by delicacy of tafte to employ the firft order preferably to the others? |
144850379 | Who does not efteem and admire Macbeth for his courage and generofity? |
144850379 | Who does not, on the bare mention of this abhfe, immediately recolleft many fad inftances of it? |
144850379 | Who more devoted to pleafures, who more patient in la¬ bours? |
144850379 | Who more rapacious, and yet more profufe? |
144850379 | Who of us do you think is ignorant of what you did the lad night, and the night before, where you was, who were with you, and what you refolved on? |
144850379 | Who therefore would not efteem, and in a particular manner endeavour to furpafs others in that wherein mankind principally excels brute hearts? |
144850379 | Who was once a better pa¬ triot, and who a greater enemy to this date? |
144850379 | Who, Sappho, wounds thy tender bread? |
144850379 | Why are you filent? |
144850379 | Why do you difiemble? |
144850379 | Why do you hefitate? |
144850379 | Why then is he bewailed longeft in our family, who died moft happily? |
144850379 | Why( hould they defign them only by an epithet without ever annexing their proper name? |
144850379 | Why? |
144850379 | Will he be kind? |
144850379 | Will not you order him to be imprifon- ed, condemned, and executed? |
144850379 | Will you engage on this loot? |
144850379 | Would he contend with me for eloquence? |
144850379 | Would he not ftumble? |
144850379 | Would they think of making a new lan¬ guage to exprefs the qualities of mind? |
144850379 | Would you, who are wo nt to difplay your eloquence fo warmly in the danger of others, aft fo coldly in your own? |
144850379 | Yet lives there one, whofe heedlefs eye, Shall fcorn thy pale fhrine glimm’ring near? |
144850379 | Yhe richejl metal joined with the fame*? |
144850379 | ^ 1 a The brightnefs of vifion through the inftrument will be exprefled by the fra&ionl^?! |
144850379 | and from hence, what noble excurfions may be made into hiftory, into panegyric upon the greateft beauties or heroes of the paft or pre- fent age? |
144850379 | and how much it lofes of that ipirit and energy, which( hews itfelf in Cicero ’s manner of ex- preffion? |
144850379 | and if I be a majier, ’ where is my fear? |
144850379 | and that( he is kindeft to thofe who have lealt concern with her?. |
144850379 | and the highed card of the fuit wins the trick.—Note, Pl “?'' |
144850379 | and will he not forfake me? |
144850379 | are we to draw conclufions from an example, which, far from deciding the difpute, gives occalion to ano¬ ther? |
144850379 | at whofe fide was its point direc¬ ted? |
144850379 | be a drop of rain, ag the axis or diameter of the drop, and/ r? |
144850379 | deteft, fear, inquire, deny? |
144850379 | did I fay that may give every one occafion for a very grievous and I have? |
144850379 | did not I know that life is fhort, but the glory of gene¬ rous aflions permanent? |
144850379 | do not you perceive your defigns are difeo- vered? ” He might indeed have faid, abufe our patience a long while. |
144850379 | eJ if they facrifked men to the Eatua? |
144850379 | elegaxc?. |
144850379 | f Cur ego, fi nequeo ignoroque, Poeta falutor? |
144850379 | f William of Wickham, bifhop of r? |
144850379 | fhall I not by all means defend hitja? ”''O It Y. |
144850379 | have pow’r to move? |
144850379 | how did they get it? |
144850379 | how then? |
144850379 | i. going to embrace? |
144850379 | is this a dream? |
144850379 | is this a vifion? |
144850379 | j, 2 the next eye- glafs J Diftance between the two eye- glaffes — 2.4 Focal diftance of the eye- glafs next the? |
144850379 | j8b< j from the ancient manners and the too rigorous laws of Invention, the coftume? |
144850379 | jngS> when exprefled in poetry, fliould call forth our affeftions, is natural enough; but can deferiptions of inanimate things alfo be made affefting? |
144850379 | light? |
144850379 | mentioned in the fenate? |
144850379 | muft one fwear to the truth of a fong? |
144850379 | muft the wretched exiles ever mourn? 4 Nor after length of rolling years return? |
144850379 | muft the wretched exiles ever mourn? 4 Nor after length of rolling years return? |
144850379 | nay, do I live? |
144850379 | of in the court? |
144850379 | or Roman generals, who wanted nothing to confummate their glory, but that they lived too long? |
144850379 | or What he is doing? |
144850379 | or beauty ’s charms Afford that blifs we fancy in its arms? |
144850379 | or fo delightful to hear, as a judicious and folid difcourfe in florid and polite language? |
144850379 | or fo powerful and grand, as to influence the populace, the judges, the lenate, by the charms of eloquence? |
144850379 | or how is it to be diftinguifhed from the principal aftion? |
144850379 | or of what farther ufe can I think my- felf to be, thus difappointed by heaven? |
144850379 | prefer above all things? |
144850379 | tell me, gentle friend, How went he under him? |
144850379 | that I am contemned? |
144850379 | the inflrudlor to be found that can unveil this fecret connexion? |
144850379 | their pillars, trophies, and monuments of glory? |
144850379 | this ’ tis to have linen and “ buck bafleets? |
144850379 | what avails it me the flocks to keep, Who loft, my heart, while I preferv’d my( keep? |
144850379 | what will ev’ry dirge avail? |
144850379 | where Jhall I go? |
144850379 | where{ hall I turn myfelf? |
144850379 | whether, for example, in the following lines, the fe- paration of the acceffory prepofition from the princi¬ pal fubftantive, be according to rule? |
144850379 | which way( hall I bring in my accufation? |
144850379 | who does not abhor him as a monfter of cruelty, treachery, and ingratitude? |
144850379 | who does not pity him when befet with all the terrors of a preg¬ nant imagination, fuperftitious temper, and awakened confcience? |
144850379 | why are you fo ignorant, as to think it unhappy for your fon, that, weary of life, he has withdrawn himfelf to his anceftors? |
144850379 | why do you fome¬ times wink at the greateft ciimes of mankind, or de¬ lay the punifhment of them to futurity? |
144850379 | will not fhe dread the confcious walls, nor that fad and mournful night? |
144850379 | will not( he fear, left the houfe itfelf ffiould fpeak the villany? |
144850379 | would he not fall down,( Since pride muft have a fall), and break the neck Of that proud man that did ufurp his back? |
144850379 | — tlon? |
144850379 | “ Doth he hear it? |
144850379 | “ How, ” fays he, “ was the defign of this poifon laid? |
144850379 | “ If any one( fays he) fhould bring you upon trial, and ufe that faying of Caf¬ fius, Cui bono? |
144850379 | “ Was it becoming me( fays he) to ex- peft death with that compofednefs of mind as fome have imagined? |
144850379 | “ What is Honour? |
144850379 | “ Who, ” fays he, “ ever was, or need be more knowing, than this man? |
144850379 | “ Would you talk thus( fays he) if you was ferious? |
144850379 | “ You will aflt me, ” fays he, “ why we are fo delighted with this man? |
144850379 | “ do I fleep? |
144850379 | •Milton is ftill bolder when-and Figures jie fays> Who would not fing for Lycidas? |