Questions

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
19132055622(?
1913205563*?
1913205564?< S>,''"a, j X''i?jr1^ ’ y^S-''v ’ ’’''V^^ ■ f»3,''f%:S ste-•''"vV''*.- •.''
191320556><*/
191320556?
191320556? re bne* anc^ to Prevent it cracking; of the animal or vegetable matter, blow out the afhes.
191320556A 2 Mr BUR g?
191320556Afdrubal being informed of Part of^ this motion, ordered all the old barks in the harbour Romanflee?
191320556Before the ceremonies began, they called filence in the affembly, by the formula, ZvQnpit- ts a- iyi ttx; icx haw?
191320556Brave and generous fon, why do you not bind your father ’s hands, that when Caefar comes, he may find me un¬ able to defend myfelf?
191320556Bullialdus, andpub- liftied by F. Quefnel at Paris in 1679?
191320556But did a meditated imprifonment juftify treachery, trea- fon, and murder?
191320556But what greatnefs of mind is there in a generofity which follows on the ufurpation of the fupreme power?
191320556CALVART, Denis, a celebrated painter, was born at Antwerp in 1552?
191320556CANELLE, or Cane Land, a large country in the idand of Ceylon, called formerly the kingdom of Cote?.
191320556CASTRATION, in Surgery, the operation of gelding, i. e. of cutting off the tefticles, and putting a male animal out
191320556Castle, in the fea language, is a part of the ftiip?
191320556Cato raifing himfelf, and looking fiercely at them, “ How long is it, ” faid he, “ fince I have loft my fenfes, and my fon is become my keeper?
191320556Character?, The jaws are equal and pointed j the horny laminae LOG Y.
191320556Characters ufed in Mu/ jc, and of Mujical Notes''with their proportions, are as follo w. crotchet quaver femiquaver demifemiquaver T?
191320556Do you pretend to force a man of my ygars to live?
191320556For this purpofe Menzikof demanded of that emperor ’s fecretary, whether his late mafter had left any written declaration of his intentions?
191320556GALLIUM, in Ancient Geography, an inland town of Peucetia, a divifion of Apulia; a place four or five?
191320556Hannibal Hitherto we have feen Hannibal furprifmgly vi&o- ffcperior to rious j and, indeed, if we confider what he had already eener?
191320556He died of the plague at Bafil in 1629, aged 6?.
191320556He returned to Paris the 27th of Septem¬ ber 1754?
191320556He who refided in Judaea commonly took up his abode at Tiberias, and affumed the name of Rof?
191320556His religion had no mixture of aufterity?
191320556In 1739?
191320556Is it not obvious, that the-difplay of certain virtues is neceffary to put in motion the political ma¬ chine?
191320556Is this owbng to the difference of age in the in¬ dividuals in which it has been obferved?
191320556It continued under the dominion of the houfe of Auftria till 1677?
191320556Others fetch the word from the Greek, xctrec, and kv^o?, a hollow, cavity, or the like.
191320556Ricciolus, in his Afironomia Reformata, de¬ termined the places of 101 ftars for the year 1700?
191320556The Engliftr, with Sir Ilaac Newton, CAL[< 4] CAL.Ga^''u.u?.
191320556The time gently into the channel and paffages made for f Ai’-?
191320556They Catapult?.
191320556This attefta- tion being confirmed by many perfons prefent, Men¬ zikof cried out, “ What need have we of any tefta- ment?
191320556This ceremony was per¬ formed in I724?
191320556This temple wras alfo called Tor- Caph El, which was changed to rgnorpaA*?
191320556Tongue not Senfe of tajie.—The tongue in mofl: animals is oi-£;in''of''ie not onl?
191320556We have the following defer?
191320556What then can be the paflionate inducement to this courfe of life?
191320556Where can y''''''We hope to receive information upon this fubjefl but from aftronomical obfervations?
191320556ani?
191320556as 5 being Chaplain?
191320556f 3 bein§ rctkaed in Parallel lines, body by the/ a kc01‘d mnror be placed diametrically oppofite the refledlion ot^rn> lt; vvld?
191320556fpecula-/orA?
191320556his iecular tranfaXions were at¬ tended with no imputation of artifice; and the veifa-?
191320556i''‘:- nv • « r^''v A''‘ 5-;- Tv''? ■-v;T^i> Wp^''ts.
191320556i?''
191320556ofthe7neck,^ertej}r£e — Hie piked whale has feven vertebrae in and back;* ie net^?
191320556or can you bring any reafon to prove, that it is not bafe and unworthy of Cato to beg his fafety of an enemy?
191320556pooi 8.24 735 t 147* 45* 45 x 20 X 26* 51* 75 195 242 233 209 189 194 2x4 160 11?
191320556t^ie organ hut is alfo intended for tafle?
191320556“ Who, for inftance, would not wilh to know what degree of permanency we ought to afcribe to the luftre of our fun?
1926921931752?
1926921932. where R is the refervoir, RS the0fMont- height of the fall, and ST the horizontal canal which? ° lfier f. conveys the water to the engine ABHTC.
1926921932400 3.710 3- 875 3.981 2- 333 2- 353 2.057 3.000 2.964 3- 5’7 3.622 1.0181 0.6440 3.5212 3- 53io 3-?
192692193424 HERA"Suppoitrr?
19269219362 During the fecond century, all the fefls continued Account 0?
19269219395i 9i ° f R5 1 8 f h ’ 1 1 13^ 136^ I37li 138A> 38tI i39 t?
192692193
192692193?
192692193? 58 On t’nc fluids HYDRODYNAMICS.
192692193? r, tnly ° bfeved; •''''.
192692193At the fame time it muft be owned, that fome kind of reformation hath taken place even in Popery and? 4lahometanifm themfelves.
192692193Berlin, 1775?
192692193But he had the moft extenfive View of the fea when he w''as about eight miles up the river} from which flation the extreme parts of it borenorth- wei?
192692193But when fhould I be able to find a time ia which your lordfhip ’s goodnefs is not employed?
192692193Can he under.ftand the rider ’s fpurring him wuth his face direded to it, as a lion for him to pafs it?
192692193Can it be fuppofed that under thefe circumllances, the two nations fhould have totally changed characters on their coming into India?
192692193Defeription of the ori¬ ginal pump of Ctefi- biu?.
192692193Dividing by? ’, we have 2 n.
192692193E. HOUSTONIA, a genus of plants belonging to the tetrandria clafs, and in the natural method ranking un- Hou- der the 47th order, Stellate?.
192692193For vvhcn^-uF given the three floatboards FG, DE, BC have the fame po- b?
192692193From the year 1678 to the time of his death in 1707?
192692193Having attentively ifudied the pi&ures of Mig- non?
192692193Hf?
192692193Hiftory of the Jew?, Babyloni- ans, Egyp¬ tians, See.
192692193His expe- hodzonta?
192692193How is it poflible they can know it is • deligned as a punifhment?
192692193Hypotliefis of Dr Ha- 730 AmS, P‘r “"? uc,. ‘^ water than D. But if we admit the Sic.
192692193II I N[ 475 1 H I N Hindoo?.
192692193In his laft ficknefs his frequent queftions were, Whether his difeafe was curable?
192692193In order to conflnnd the mill courfe to thegreated Conftruc- advantage, w7e mud give but a very fmall declivity to t ‘(??.
192692193In order to conflnnd the mill courfe to thegreated Conftruc- advantage, w7e mud give but a very fmall declivity to t ‘(??.
192692193In the fecond edition of his Principia, accordingly, which appeared in 1714?
192692193Is it a wmnder that a horfe ftiould be afraid of a loaded waggon?
192692193Is it not then probable, that vdren driven up to a carriage he ftarts at it, he conceives himfelf obliged either to attack or run ag.ainft.it?
192692193It ap¬ pears from the lati column of the table, that the tangent of the inclination of the tubes is 0.153b?
192692193It is an excellent manure for pafture- grounds, and excels? 11 other kinds of dung for trees.
192692193It is obvious from the propofition, that the altitude o?
192692193It was defigned to anlwer a queftion which began to be much agitated, whether the fmall coal of Scotland is the fame with the culm of England?
192692193Jds??
192692193Jds??
192692193LAND, the larged of the feven United Pro¬ vinces, divided into South and North Holland, the latter of which is alfo called IIv/?
192692193P- J??
192692193P- J??
192692193See Moon, Astronom?
192692193She tranllated a dra- 3 H 2 raatric HER[ 42?]
192692193T m ° Jtl0n118 retarded b?
192692193The 50 daughters of the king became mothers by Hercules during H E H[ 430 1 H E? V Ilercule?.
192692193The 50 daughters of the king became mothers by Hercules during H E H[ 430 1 H E? V Ilercule?.
192692193The one was from the city of Tyre, which for( even months re¬ dded his utmod efforts*?
192692193The word is Greek; formed of alter, “ different, ” and ysv «?
192692193The word is formed of the Greek higodofa; a compound of mga?
192692193This is not only the beft method, but alfc the eafieft and the fliorteft: by it a man is foon made fuffi- ciently 6i4- H O R S E M Initruflior?
192692193Various methods have been propofed by differ- mcthodsof en(- pbilofophers for meafuring the velocity of running the vdo''cf water?
192692193W hen a veffel Ft; xu is plunged in water, and the attraSionf pai^''“?
192692193W. Lon?
192692193Was it poffibie he Ihould have an enemy?
192692193We are apt to fuppofe that a horfe fears nothing do much as his rider} but may he not, in many cir- cumftances, be afraid of inftant deftrudion?
192692193We muft feek therefore for thf?
192692193What wonder if fuch a man were univerfally beloved?
192692193Y N A M I C S. 73?
192692193and whether it ought to be carried coalf- wife free of all duty?
192692193been obliged to be the paffive fpeffators; for what is it Ho!lan5; which may not be eftablilhed at the point of the bayo- net?
192692193may not the hanging load feem to threaten the falling on him?
192692193of being crulhed?
192692193of being drowned?
192692193of falling down a. preci¬ pice?
192692193p. 3 x I?
192692193“ And, like the taurw, which occupy the place of fertile cows, Ihould be re- ieeded or fent away. ” He likewife quotes Varro?
192692193“ It would per- muft not feel for an animal in this fituation?
192692193■ Jfttfss/ A''in?
191809866*^* j?
191809866-The fpeaker then again opens the contents; and, holding it up in his hands, puts the queftion, Whether the bill{ hall pafs?
191809866/ S70 B L E A^tytanc^ Proce^s^e^ng t0 ° concentrated, muft be diluted in the? u 1^nLeS- copper bafon as before with river\vater.
1918098661661, on the king ’s letter?
1918098661683.?
1918098663> i ia t V-''^0(?
1918098663?
191809866?
191809866? ■ BLANES.
191809866?, and died in the Black Mountain.
191809866A fort of bandage, formed of a flender filken firing that is faftened round the bird ’s body, and under raifingng?
191809866Bavay li Baudiu1?
191809866Blood Hounds, in''Zoology, the canis fagax of Lin¬ naeus J, le chieti courant of Buffon, the feuthounde of the 1 See Can:?.
191809866Bonny, a town of France, in the Gatinois, fcated? t the confluence of a river of the fame name with the Loire.
191809866But for what purpofe then ftiould wife na¬ ture have furniihed the drones with that large quantity of feminal liquor?
191809866But thou thyfelf moveft alone: who can be a companion of thy courfe?
191809866But what dependence is there to be put on the liabi¬ lity of the things of this world?
191809866De PrcrJIantia et Dignitate Divine?
191809866For what is human exiftence, in its prefent flate, if you deprive it of a£tion and contemplation?
191809866Have we not then a right to call the wrorld to an account?
191809866Hawkin''s The practice of ringing bells in change, or regular Pea^s?
191809866He afked afterwards what o’clock it was?
191809866His death happen¬ ed, after a few days illnefs, at his feat near Cirenceder, in the 9id year of his age, and on the 16th of Sep¬ tember 177?.
191809866His moft capital performance is MleVVf th?
191809866How can we beftow''alms wrho are not rich?
191809866How many relations in ecclefiaftical wri¬ ters of Madonas, crucifixes, and wafers, bleeding?
191809866I have done this after a limited 4 S timej/ 69 ° D L E A ye£tab, e time, and repeated proofs of the good quality of the U U^nce?
191809866I he pidures of this mafter which are moft commended are the Italian fea- ports, with veffels lying- before them He poMed a lively imagination; no?
191809866In 1639?
191809866In 1699?
191809866It may be alked in¬ deed, If fixed air is capable of fupplying this fpirit in fuch plenty, how comes it to be fo inftantaneoufly fatal when breathed?
191809866Jenghiz Khan having taken poffeflion of Bokhara, entered on horfe- back into the great mofque, and afked merrily if that was the fultan ’s palace?
191809866John Crellius publifhed his verfion of the New Teftament at Kacovia in 1630?
191809866Louis faid, “ Do you wonder at it?
191809866O firft created Beam, and thou great Word, Let there be light, and light was over all 5 Why am I thus bereav’d thy prime decree?
191809866So obvious, and fo eafy to be quench’d?
191809866The books which are now loft and cited in the Old Teftament an?
191809866The common boat contained only eight men, who rocked it and made it incline fo much to one fide, that?
191809866The next half inch below is marked yL?
191809866The principal?
191809866The utility of the plough, for example, may make it an ob¬ jeft of admiration or of defire; but why fhould utility make it beautiful?
191809866There is alfo an edition of them by Laurence at Am¬ fterdam in 1631, in a large charatter 5 and another in 12mo, at Franckfort, in 1694?
191809866Thomfon, made from Beza ’s Latin edition, together with the notes of Beza, publilhed in 1^ 82 in 4^ °?
191809866To prevent this, among other incon¬ veniences, the civil law ordained that no widow?
191809866What is there more noble than that right of afylum fo refpefted among all the tribes?
191809866What keeps it alive in the firft cafe?
191809866What mud be done?
191809866When the houfe hath agreed or difagreed to the amendments of the committee, and fometimes added nevt?
191809866Why fhould we faft in the Ramadan, fince the whole year with us is one continual faft?
191809866^ The reader, perhaps, will afk here, Could not this Method of end have been gained by the firft pair of thermome- computing ters?
191809866_^4?
191809866but the public not approving of his plan, he threw it into a different form j and the firft volume was publiflied in Auguft 1695?
191809866duke of Sua- bia?
191809866fea?
191809866fervecj} with regard to the tubulated bottles or bodies jf?
191809866fible for him to go through fo much fatigue?
191809866j''Qre ar{ tfJOU come?
191809866jhey went to Jerufalem; where, according to the pope ’s> 2] B E c order, they fpent their lives in penitential aufterities, Beck?
191809866light and fhadow 5 the natural eafe and firoplicity in t^e att;tu(jes Qf figures?
191809866per C.?
191809866that it ly fuppreflfed that impetuous and ungovernable pafllon?
191809866to what ufe fo large an apparatus of fecundating organs fo well defcribed by Reaumur and Maraldi?
191809866whence thy everlafting light?
191809866who gave him an exprefs order to con- Bignor.ia tinue his refearches on that fubjeft: but the death of pj]ai( je?> that prince interrupted his defign.
191809866yet being fain.hna.ely united to the lias not the property of that add?
191679020(?)
191679020* as all the membets of Society are naturally equal, it may be afked, In whole hands are the reins of govern¬ ment to be intrufted?
191679020-Wherein remain’d, For what could elfe?
191679020...-?
191679020/)*?
1916790201 he fird has, by our cutloms, the benefcium ordinis, or of difcuffion; by which the creditor is ob¬ liged to difcufs the proper debtor?
191679020A cuftom, that lands( hall defcend to the moft worthy of the owner ’s blood, is void j for how fhall this worth be determined?
191679020A day is adjedted to the year, in majorem evidential?
191679020All the co- adjudgers within the year are pre-? b\e paripa/ Ju, as if one adjudication had been led for all their debts.
191679020An inhibition is a diligence limply prohibitory, Is fimply fo that the debt, on which it proceeds, continues per- prohffk01''?
191679020And this notion was carried fo far in toe old Gothic conftitution( wherein the kin?
191679020Anfwer, Mr*** To whom will Mifs*** be married?
191679020As I do in the country?
191679020As to rights granted by the wife affecting her feeling her enate?
191679020Before you attempt to( how?
191679020Better thus: “ If he was not the grea ell kin?
191679020But muft we then admit, that nothing but found can be imitated by found?
191679020But the enumeration of many particulars in the fame period is often necef- fary: and the queftion is, In what order they ftiould be placed?
191679020Greece flourifhed?
191679020Had every foldier in the feu-.dal army received the inveiliture of arms?
191679020Hence, in llridtnefs, no deed, though perfedled accord- Solemnities ing to the law of the place where it is figned, can have^^6^?
191679020Hi?
191679020Ihe king, iurprifed at the oddity of his appearance, immediately alked him what was the meaning of it, and whether he was going?
191679020In adlions of debt,
191679020In this cafe, while he is burning 74?
191679020In which hand do you think the ball is?
191679020Is it not rather a mixture of fame- nefs and diveriity,—famenefs in the found, and diver- lity in the fignification?
191679020It is a large town of 1180 houfes, with about 6000 in¬ habitants, who carry on an extenfive trade in weavin?
191679020It is not, however, mean and common compilers?
191679020K A L People that lead a pallor?.!
191679020KESTREL, the Englilh name of a hawk, called alfo\\\?
191679020King, Dr William, archbilhop of Dublin in the 18th century, was defeended from an ancient family in 3 the north 0?
191679020L A W.^,''a"“ f''“! „ a,?
191679020LAN O father, what Intends thy hand, fhe cry’d, Again ft thy only fon?
191679020LAN Qmis globus, O elves, caligine volvitur atra?
191679020LEAKE, Richard, mailer gunner of England, was born at Harwich in 1629, and was bred to the T?
191679020LELAND, John, a celebrated Englilh antiquary, was born in London about the year IJ0?
191679020Let it( hut withveftous por- hinges and faften with a hook 5 and let it have two bottoms, the loweft of wood, that araws out by a 0?
191679020May it not then be laid down as a principle, That laughter arifes from the view of two or more obje&s or ideas difpofmg the mind to form a comparifon?
191679020N rw, how can this be, if the proudejl part of mankind are alfo moft addifled to it, unlefs rve fuppofe vanity and pride to be the fame thing?
191679020O?
191679020Obligations are extinguiftiable by the confent o/ By confent?.
191679020Of Injuries to Real Proberti/; and, fir ft of Sfpt YT Of TMT^rr rr n n r^?
191679020On the weft fide of the ifiand there is an anchoring place called Whitfarlan; towards the north end is a bay called Da?!
191679020Perdition catch my foul, but I do love thee: In which the ftrong emphafis upon the word DO, give?
191679020Schools are alfo erefted in al¬ moft every village, to which the Kamtfchatkans fend their children with great pleafure*?
191679020Snr Pappuis du monde^uefaut il qu''on fonde D''efpoir?
191679020Socii crini-? iis.
191679020Solon penned his laws upon xvooden tablets, called Afovs?
191679020Suppofe the perfon who Hands the third in order has put the ring upon the fecond joint of the thumb of his left hand: then 1 The C_ fa/?
191679020The laft bilhop of Leighlm before its union with Ferns, was the right^TdA0be?
191679020The minifters were then called over yearly in the fynod, and were commonly alked, Whether they had preached to the times?
191679020The women, on the contrary, let the hair defcend over the forehead as low as the eve- brows, and tie the remaining part in a knot upon the toj?
191679020There are three foils of inferior jurifdicfions j the firft is tene-?
191679020This Tn liter pomPou ‘; comPany?
191679020This, however, is the lake in which, as Strabo fays, was the fabled Hydra o?
191679020What w7as the ufe of the caverns to which the jiame of labyrinth was given?
191679020Where two or more perfons become common vidingcom- proprietors of the fame fubjehi, either by legacy, gift, fma prope-or pUrcllare?
191679020Will you to the utmoft of your power maintain the laws of God, the true profef-^''i0n, an<^ Protefiant reformed religion ellabhfhed by the law?
191679020Will you to your r „ caufe law and jufiice, in mercy, to be executed in your judgements? — King or queen.
191679020Y this law to pafs? ” This being done, thoie that dii- liked the motion delivered their fentiments in oppofition to it.
191679020You did not fee it then?
191679020You did not lee it pals?
191679020You may in fome meafure judge of Plirfy ’s manner, by one ftiort letter to his friend, which runs thus: “ How fare you?
191679020You then tell him who drew the fird word, that it fhall be.Ink?''
191679020[ 75?]
191679020^ad. C Can01?
191679020amounts to 12,? ool.
191679020could he wear a feal, furpafs in lilk and drels, ufe enligns armorial, and enjoy all the other privileges of knighthood?
191679020d''h?
191679020died in 1547?
191679020eplacita, to hold pleas, and the plaintiff may fue either there oi in the king ’s court?.
191679020feems to hav?
191679020pleafantly?
191679020that is, Where( hall I take more?
191679020that is, at leifure?
191679020the firit month; for thus the child is more peculiar!?
191679020their Remedies, refbctlin?
191679020vnCe hC? reek the taurus ’ the French taureau, and the Italian and Spanifli*, V 1 7-DMf TV"T •I!11 nVEIT.H,.
191679020“ Had you rather Caefar were living, and die all Haves, than that Caefar were dead, to live all free men? ” Julius Ccefar.
191679020“ Were there feveral labyrinths in that ifland?
191679020•?
191320557(? •) With fea water two ounces.
191320557, Benzoin.. combined 24?!
191320557-/-''ArZ/ r/vr(//p/ tAruf////''(%*?///''/‘a r?
191320557-/-''ArZ/ r/vr(//p/ tAruf////''(%*?///''/‘a r?
191320557/?
1913205570 5?
191320557125?
191320557127?
1913205571790 Properties 179?
1913205571827? roperties.
1913205571984? repara- •tion.
1913205571?
1913205572* 7 Reflecting on thefe experiments, Count Rumford recurs to the queftion, What is heat?
19132055722r?
1913205573^?
19132055742.692 42.548 40.344 8l.?
19132055763?
1913205577o8 C H E M I Analyfis offtances employed for tin ’s purpofe are known in che- Mineral by the name of tejis or re- agents, becaufe they._VSravtJr?''
19132055790- 93 91- 8?
19132055795?
191320557?
191320557? 4 Bodies exift in three different ftates, which are quite iyratter in diftind from each other; in the folid ftate, the liquid, three ftates.
191320557? e maffes or diftindt tears from Alexandria.
191320557? ubfl*nces; 4.
191320557A4?
191320557Alumina enters into combination with many of Qf earth?
191320557An infoluble infipid fait is thus formed, which is decom¬ pofed by fulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acid?.
191320557Bodies are deprived of caloric, not only by radia- Radiation tion from their furfaces, but it is alfo conduded by not the Iblf?
191320557But what is the caufe that the particles of bodies, in thefe circumftances, arrange themfelves in this man- g2 ner?
191320557But what is the fource of the light?
191320557By adding water drop by drop to this folution, the colour vaniflie?, and the metal is depofited in the form of black flakes.
191320557C H A[ 408 work?)
191320557C H E M for the future growth of the plant$ but from what fource is the nouriihment derived for the formation of_ the root itfelf?
191320557CHAZELLES, C H A Cfnazelle?, CHAZELLES, Joan Matthew, Chazinza- mathematician and engineer, was born at Lyons rians- in 1657.
191320557Divifion of L Natural bodies may be properly divided into 01 natural bo- gamzed and inorganized, each of which exhibit ch?
191320557During the fiege well?
191320557Extractive matter, which is fometimes found in matter^''6 m*nera^ vvat- ers?
191320557He was ftrangely fur- prifed at fuch a fight: and afked her whofe head it was, and what had induced her to do an aft fo un¬ common to her fex?
191320557Hence the Hundreds lyin?
191320557I 50U I.50?
191320557I wmn- dered a little at your query, Who Chefelden was?
191320557I. Caoutchouc is a foft elaftic fubftance, chiefly ob- Hiftoy?
191320557In the two former, the water and the mercury, it is comparatively weak, but s?)
191320557Is it emitted by the oxygen gas along with the caloric in its change from the fluid to the folid ftate?
191320557Is there any concju(jes fuch thing as an igneous fluid?
191320557It Acid:?, has no effect on vegetable blues.
191320557It appears from the diftillation of gluten, and?
191320557It burns Sulphate?, flowly with the afliftance of the nitrates.
191320557It had three tinuaiw a''n"’*^ and?
191320557It was formerly called 1 S T R Y. aqua regia, from its property of diflblving gold, which Acid?, was diftinguiflied by the name asking of the metals.
191320557Molybdate of Soda?
191320557Of alkaiie?.
191320557Or has it been a conftituent part of the combuftible body which is feparated during com¬ buftion?
191320557SO?
191320557Some fpecies of the tribe of lichen contain a con- Lichen?
191320557Tenacity is expreftive of the power of cohefion Tenacity, between the particle?
191320557The bark conftitutes 225?
191320557The beft kind, Component1 which is highly valued by the Turks, is never feen in? arts ot Europe.
191320557The combination of fuccinic acid with foda, form?
191320557The fecretary, terri¬ fied left the houfe fhould come down upon them, let his pen drop out of his hand: “ What is the matter?
191320557The fpecific gravity varies from 1.341* 0 SuMan^e?
191320557The fpecific gravity varies from o.pifS?
191320557The fulphurets, hydrofulphurets, and phofphurets?
191320557The mineral called mo/ ybdena, from which thisHiftory?
191320557The phofphate of lime is of great importance in pfeTs2I?
191320557The quantity of ftand¬ ard acid was 66.7?
191320557The quotient is the capacity of the other fubfance, that of water being accounted 1 f(?
191320557Thefe cryftals were found to be fulphate of foda,/ C H E M I? 7<3 Animal matter.
191320557Then I)~ 2?
191320557Thirty grains of it obtained from charcoal and metallic oxides, required 1?
191320557This fomethin?
191320557This ft1?
191320557Thus too, it appears, that ve- fom- So?
191320557Ufelels checks fhould alfo be avoided, unlefi?
191320557Vegetable?.
191320557Very true j but is it not re¬ filled in going down, both by the form of the chim¬ ney and other evident caufes, fo that it mull return again?
191320557What PurP ° fes are the ufes of refpiration in the animal economy?
191320557What are the purpofes of thefe changes?
191320557What then is the order in which the adhefion of thefe different fubftances takes place?
191320557When it is ftrongly heated in aProPertie?
191320557When phofphorus is heated to the temperature of 14^ °?
191320557With an Alkahe?
191320557Yttna.&c, 45?
191320557_ s?
191320557at thii game when the odgbal^ne"s’loft?
191320557d? n/ n/< f.
191320557neW metal dlfcovered m crude Platina h?
191320557not yet known from what plant this Myrrl?''''
191320557or what is the caufe of the fame bodies in the Accounted fame circumftances affuming regular figures?
191320557ous and vitreous humours is 1.0053?
191320557r t?
191320557r w, « n, y 0 u e ci*]/''?
191320557r/&/ f/ u/{?& ffida/ w/f/?//''.
191320557ryr?
191320557thc, ooki"s^ the charaaer affigne/ to rollf aW?
191320557«* • See EorS"?
191320557“ Can any thing more be wanting to prove that this is the fame with the modern theory of combuftion?
191320557“ However, from what I have ftated of the compo- 33?
191320557“ Three hundred and feventy- nine years after the Clief?.
191320557“ What fignify fo many words? ” fays foe, offered me violence, and reaped a joy fatal to me j 9.
191320557■?.
1913205601? o.
1913205602 — 3 4- 5 7 8 9 10 ii 1 2! 3 14 15 16 I?
191320560221 22?
1913205603 °?
1913205603d, Flemilh pei''1. fterling?
1913205608?
1913205608TV How much Spanilh money will this amount to, exchange at 38{do fterling per piaftre?
191320560: How much money muft be paid at Edinburgh for the bill?
191320560
191320560> vv w// EKPE TOX, O Cr Y. f''''rf/.Sr-//? r.
191320560?
191320560?
191320560?
191320560?
191320560?
191320560?
191320560? 6.
191320560? hil.
191320560?>( i.h< gmeroi- A native of Europe.
191320560Black; covered with yellow hairs; the elytra fmooth at the tips; the legs tawny j antenna?
191320560Black; the fcutellum whitifh j the divifions between c- quitatG?
191320560Can yoii be furprifed that I endea¬ voured to preferve them?
191320560E N C Eoarne!- blaft, they only ufe a glafs pipe, into which they blow 1* ’''?
191320560EPITAPH( from wri, upon, and rapa?, fepulchre''), a monumental infeription, in honour or memory of a perfon deceafed.
191320560ETC[ 334 I ETC V I''/clv-''.?.
191320560ETJJICSj the doftrine of manners?
191320560Faint?
191320560Flemifti per crowm: what mqft be the rate of exchange between London and Amfterdam, in order to be on a par with the other two?
191320560Flemilh per crown; what may be gained per cent, by drawing on Paris, and remitting to Amfterdam?
191320560Flemilh per pound fterling?
191320560Flemilh?
191320560Had thefe worms died of hunger?
191320560He next afked his auditors, whether they w7ould have the protedlor for their king?
191320560Head dijlincl fro?
191320560Head pro- ieClin?.
191320560How can this be paid?
191320560How much fterling money is equal to 1459 ducats 18 fols 1 denier, bank money of Venice, exchange at 52^ fterling per ducat?
191320560How much fterling money is equivalent to 3390 pezzos 16 foldi of Genoa, exchange at fter¬ ling per pezzo?
191320560How much fterling money will pay a hill of 827 ■* 160 rees, exchange at 63-^h fterling per millree?
191320560I he foundations of the?
191320560I, E R P E T Lizard?, ftrong and tliick, when the animal has reached its full growth, that it eafily refills the force of a mulket- ball.
191320560I5C> The prince was at this time about 22 years ot age,? riSceeEdbyand by his aftive and refolute conduct had infpired the ward.
191320560If 140 H 7[ 365] E X C IOO IO 5 L.:: 1780 5 7)8900 1271 5?
191320560If 64I: 1000 500 8 20 51?
191320560If I had fubmitted without a ftruggle, how much would it have diminilhed the luftre cf my fall, and of your victory?
191320560If you Romans have a de¬ fire to arrive at univerfal monarchy, muft all nations, to gratify you, tamely fubmit to fervitude?
191320560In 1389?
191320560In later times the fmaller feftivals were preparatory to the greater, and no per¬ fon could be initiated at Eleufis without a previou?
191320560In the v~ i-''year 1534, he was declared head of the church by par- r f26?
191320560It had formerly fo many convents, that it Was called Monk- tow?
191320560It may now be afked, Why fuch explofions do not take place with any other metal, iron for inflance, when water is thrown upon its furface in fufxon?
191320560Lepidoptera,( from Aea- o?
191320560Lhus, an ancient Latin poet praifing an orator, fays, that all his words were ranged like the pieces in mofaic: S^uam lepide* e| «?
191320560M. de la Lande, in his E?
191320560Muft pollen be ate by bees, to be in a ftate to produce wrax?
191320560See Arians andEuftatll!an?
191320560Should the antennae prefent a tiffue of many nerves, what inconvenience can refult from fuppofing that this tiffue is capable of tranfmitting odour?
191320560The de- thSi?
191320560The fame ftory of the con¬ fidence placed in Arnaces, who was one of the Perfian king ’s eunuchs, is related alfo in the life of Phemifto- cles?
191320560The firft was, Whether any part of the eucharift be evacuated by flool?
191320560The flelh is delicately white, Lizard?, but has fo perfumed a tafte and fmell, that I never v''could relilh it with pleafure.
191320560The king, ftruck with this unufaal appearance, atked them what was their purpofe, and whether they pretended to make him their prifoner?
191320560The mar- ScruPle?
191320560The pope, perceiving the king ’s eagernefs, at lalt fent Cardinal Campegio his legate to London*?
191320560Then leaving the pa- Becket flies lace, he alked the king ’s immediate permiflion to quitt?
191320560There is even a difficulty with regard to the divifion which feems fo well eftablilhed?
191320560This prince furvived the treaty only about a month^ being murdered at Oxford by two of his chamberlain?, accomplices of Edric.
191320560Thofe? narkcd natives of Britain.
191320560Under thefe preten¬ ces, particularly that of adiding the Bretons, whom the kin?
191320560We have remarked above, that thefe experiment?
191320560What fterling money muft be paid in London to receive in Paris 1978 crowns 25 fols, ex¬ change at 3i4(I. per crown?
191320560What is the fterling value of 731 piaftres, at 554 each?
191320560What language wTere they talking when this bon mot was uttered?
191320560Where, therefore, did they procure mate¬ rials for their edifices?
191320560Whether grofs bodies and light were not con¬ vertible into one another?
191320560Wings alh- coloured; the upper wings marked at the*/./?, bale with a black fine, and black charade ™; legs without fpots.
191320560[ 240] Abdomen, p. 146 Acarus,_ 219 Achivi, a fubdivifion of papilio, 183, 184 Attceon, largeft coleopterous infed?
191320560] eg? •> ■> No man was more expert at reducing the rigour of the maxims of the Stoics into pradtice.
191320560currency: How much is that in fterling money, exchange at 80 per cent?
191320560fence?
191320560fterling a* mount to in Spain?
191320560fterling per millree: How much fterling money will the remittance amount to?
191320560if i:52| 1459 18 S2z 2918 7295 d. 75868 i= 729^?
191320560jn anot- lier?
191320560jrod.. Flemilh per pound, fterling?
191320560lahS? e rlrw pt was, compietev^-.kdXht we d in England; all tributes formerly paid to the ho- church, ly.
191320560lei^eTs"?
191320560per crown?
191320560per millree?
191320560per pound fterling?
191320560t 3 E*cifion ty is paid by the retailer; all artificial wines, common¬ ly called/iweAr; paper and pafteboard, firit when nicafionU''ma^e?
191320560who afked the prince in an infulting manner, how he ftrudion of dared to invade his dominions?
191320560“ The port was fmall and of a circular* Travel?
191253825''. ■''-/"‘t r. J''•''v''it1>") r«-U3 1*\ut^ 1 w>^ Mp/ l^ rt7i>>: ■ V •''■''■ i?''
191253825( i) Cal, 6-phyllu?.
191253825(?)
191253825* 5
191253825* B. the root a regular continuation of the ftem, cylin- rapa?
191253825* D. flalks naked j leaves fparingly ferrated •, petals‘Perm?, divided.—This is one of our earliell flowering plants.
191253825* G. flowers nodding, fruit oblong; awns feathered, rival?.
191253825,''-A< y?
191253825- L.105 ’ To Cafh in part, L.50 To D. Ybung?
191253825-*?> ’ £ ■/ ■ y v.-.
191253825//''//\ Zv/^iA''/•/rv y// n
1912538251-celled?
19125382510-ftriatu?.
1912538252 l3 18 14 38 117 35 29 34 18 T5 i?
1912538252-locularis?
19125382528|By Baillie and Bell, at 3s? d Apr.
1912538254-duo fterih''a Capfula?
1912538256-p’nyllu?.
19125382584?.
191253825?
191253825?
191253825?
191253825?, brazen looted.
191253825?.
191253825A As dr/?''
191253825A rtf- TTss''/isr/ scr/ Yf d
191253825Are not all thefe viciflitudes confpi- cuous in the vegetable world?
191253825BOTANOMANCY,( fromSar*)1)?, herb, and^^mi*, divination), an ancient Ipecies of divination, by means of plants} efpecially fage and fig leaves.
191253825Bacca 2-fperma, inflata, fragili?.
191253825Bacca?
191253825Bear- 29?
191253825But w7e would afk fuch, from whence does their fpirit arife?
191253825But where are thefe organs fituated?
191253825By a- and Balan- mount, brought from folio} and place the fums I^c^ei-516 an(^ fl113111^"165?
191253825C. Capfule?
191253825Cape of Good Hope, f?.
191253825Capf.?
191253825Capfula?
191253825Capfula?
191253825Climbin''?
191253825Corydales,( from xejv?
191253825Ditioni?.
191253825Do we coincide in this belief in the prefent day?
191253825Do we not find that it correfponds pretty accurately with the defeription of thefe atoms which Bofcovich has given?
191253825Does it not indicate one of the modes by which his theory w^as formed?
191253825Does it not plainly drew* us how far genius will be exerted when obfervation fails?
191253825Does not the theory feem to ad¬ mit a breach in the law of continuity, when it de¬ nies the continued extenfion of bodies?
191253825Does then ex- pLMa/-Ur|^ tenfion conftitute matter, and the want of it fpirit?
191253825Dr. 2789 Jan. 500 334?
191253825E E P I N G. 1?
191253825F?
191253825F?
191253825F?
191253825F?
191253825F?.
191253825F?.
191253825F?.
191253825F?.
191253825F?.
191253825G. Capfule?
191253825Genista, or Dye?
191253825Gentemv quadrijida?.
191253825Hate XCVll/&&.., eM £?
191253825Hiftory, B O T hunger, thiril, heat, cold,& c. with ivhat propriety could vegetables be thus faid to die, unlels we allow that they previoully lived?
191253825His colouring is good-, his touch neat; his Ikies and diftances natural and beauti- jr)?#.
191253825I?
191253825It will be afked, no doubt, if thefe bott- wmrms are not B O T[ 335] B O U Eotwar not dangerous to horfes? — The mares which afforded I!
191253825J. Berry?
191253825L.2IO Claret, for 3 hds, at 33?
191253825Laurus, an omnis?- Ordo IX.
191253825Linese difci cofta: utrinque ad- jacente?.
191253825M t/f?
191253825M. A long pod?
191253825P 2 228, ji6 B O T 22?.
191253825Pentagynia,?
191253825Pileus fubtus lamellofu?,* I2TO.
191253825Ruflia?
191253825S. Capf, 2 celled?
191253825Siliqua?
191253825Stamens 5, fertile, Styles?.
191253825T?
191253825T?.
191253825The Grecian bows were frequently beautified with gold or filver; whence rve have mention of aurei arcus; and Apollo is called A^yi^orafa?.
191253825The alga?, or foliaceous fea and land plants.
191253825The balance fhows how?
191253825The calyx? » nearly equal, bluntifh, ci- liate, and often fhaggy.
191253825The feeds are numerous.——The pulpy fruits of this orde?
191253825The town has 12 gates; and near another caftle are fine walks under feveral row?
191253825They are annual BRA[ 381] BRA Eraffic?..
191253825They hoped to make gold; and what is bread in comparifon with gold?
191253825Verfu?.
191253825Which( fays he) of all Mr Boyle ’s writings lhall I recommend?
191253825Who then can deny that vegetables are poffeffed of living and felf- moving powers?
191253825^///;; a o Ssy//?
191253825^^^ ‘ i vf*- v/ F> iMM ■ j''r v •) 1IU1II,,,^__ B8;> 1 n*?
191253825ball dehifeen?.
191253825ciliaris, data, pufilla, undulata?
191253825fality neceffarily arife from the nature of continuity?
191253825ftem ereft, flowers umbellated biftaminal, ycY?
191253825laciniis fubaequalibu?.
191253825leaves heart- ftiaped, crenate- dented, ver- ticils almoft naked, ftyle of the corolla leaning upon/ v?.
191253825leaves obovate and dented, calyxes acetabulo* fliaped, forming an acute angle, hairy, ftem fhrubby.yi?.
191253825leaves roundifh and very entire, trunca- awe*?, ted at the bafe and dented.
191253825lerrated.—It was formerly cultivated in our gardens but its place is now better fupplied by celery?
191253825or does it neceffarily refult from the nature of continuity?
191253825polyphyllum, fpinofum, foetidum?
191253825r_ dddiSdd t??.
191253825r_ dddiSdd t??.
191253825radii 5-fida?,* 944.
191253825v. ■/.7/’r/ f/ s/ rs?
191253825verticiliata, pinnata, pulchella,?
191253825with racemes lateral, leaves heart- fhaped, wr/ zVz/ i?
191253825w’as hence called/Ss?, “ bul¬ lock; and ferved them for a ferry- boat.
191253825‘ »;?
191253825“ Do we not fee( fays he) the ftigma of almoft every hermaphrodite flower covered over with the pollen or impregnating fubftance?
1912538180 £[ an(}?
191253818? fe by the human ftrength applied ixmilarly to the oars of a water¬ man.
191253818? i of this; neither have we any particular account of.the tranfaftions of the empire till the time of Amda Sion, who began to reign in 1312..
191253818? i, were feen in fome places.
191253818? ’ yard.
191253818?, filiation.
191253818ABE F 2?]
191253818ACHERUS1A palus, a lake between Cumae and the promontory IVIifenum, now?/ Go- go delta(< oh, ucia.
191253818ACROTHYMION, from extreme, and 6vpo?, thyme.
191253818AD ENOS, a kind of cotton; othervvife called? na- rlne cotton.
191253818ADDEXTRATORES, in the court of Rome, th?
191253818Abubeker, with more coolnefs and wifdom, addrefied the people, Is it, fays he, Mahomet whom you adore, or the God whom he has revealed to you?
191253818Again: Put the queftion, If one firing be but half the length of the other, and be ftruck, how will the vibrations be?
191253818Animula vagula, blandulaf Hofpes, comefque corporis, nunc ahibis in loca Pallidu/ a, rigida, nuduia, Nee, Ut foies, dabis jocos?
191253818Being dopped by the tendon of the dring, the damfels alked, Who he was?
191253818But may not the fame be faid of the idol worfhip of the hea¬ thens?
191253818But what could tempt them to make their ridges crooked?
191253818But what if ridges be already formed, that are either crooked or too high?
191253818By this guide he was fhown a Account of?
191253818C.
191253818Con?)
191253818Doth not a foil fo meliorated draw near to one per¬ petually fertile?
191253818Eefides, the cutting- roller has but feven wheels in fix feet; whereas the fward-< utter has fix in four feet three in<,''hes?
191253818Food tor They have but little manure, and their crops are iv^a^ fmall; for large crops of all forts can only be expended £._oiii|an(js n?
191253818For he fuppofes that the bark and outer part of the wood have been rent afunder, to Lather?''
191253818Great flocks of a bird as large as a turkey, called, in the Am- haric language, erhoG?
191253818Hath no man con- ‘ demned thee?
191253818Hath no man condemned thee?--/—W ‘ She faid, No man, Lord.
191253818He muft therefore have pof- kmg ° f E- felfed confiderable maritime power: Nor was he lefs IT?
191253818Hence Acianji?, Salig- nus, and or Kt^i; for Adonidis horti, are gardens beautifully arranged, but more adapt¬ ed for pleafure than profit.
191253818His fingers in his ear were benumbed by the cold, and he felt a violent pain when^n^^.S ear anc* Jaw?
191253818I am in a country where I am a ftranger, and unacquainted with the language?
191253818If it be alked, why are they more common now than formerly?
191253818If it be alked, why froft did not injure them formerly?
191253818If it be alked, why one fet produces both curled and fmooth ftems?
191253818In 1497?
191253818In March give it ano¬ ther good ploughing; drag, rake, and harrow?
191253818In all ages its inhabitants wrere engaged trace?
191253818In convcrfation one of them afked him, what he thought of the ftudy of the Scriptures?
191253818In the prefent irnperfeft Hate of our knowledge, however, this information is entitled to attention?
191253818In the year 1573?
191253818Is thy viXorious head in Fortune ’s pow’r i Since miferies my baneful love purfue, Why did I we d thee, only, to undo?
191253818It is a low unwholefome province, having Upper Shu?.''
191253818It is much Culture o?
191253818It may here be objected?
191253818It may reafonably be alked, why the feather is not much broader, fo as to cut the whole breadth of the furrow?
191253818It mud be acknowledged, however, that the recent improvements which have taken place in the art, have contributed not a little to this change jn tb?
191253818It wTas invented fome time ago by the Honourable Robert Saudilacds?
191253818M. Buffon has endeavoured to trace the connexions wdiich thefe accidental colours have with fuch as are natural, itt a variety of inilance?.
191253818N A[ 209] N G He was likewife honoured with the title of So/>hi/?, an appellation in his days given only to men of learning, and wifdom.
191253818No more a pleafmg cheerful gueft?
191253818On the fide of the tor¬ rent in which they marched, however, there grew very large fycamore trees, fome of them little lefs they 7?
191253818On the weft it is bounded by the Nil?, The river Gdhen is another boundary.''
191253818Quere the ratio of the infle&ing forces F and f?
191253818Si miferum faBura fui?
191253818Terah, at his return, alked whence came all this havock?
191253818The Greeks call it ctyvo?, chajle; to which has fince been, added the reduplicative cajlus, q. d. chafte, chafte.
191253818The JEolic digamma is a name given to the letter h, which the AEolians ufed to prefix to words beginning with vowels, as Fane?, for ene?
191253818The JEolic digamma is a name given to the letter h, which the AEolians ufed to prefix to words beginning with vowels, as Fane?, for ene?
191253818The fir ft tranfa&ions of this fociety were ptblifhed in 1728, and entitled Commentarii Academic?
191253818The length of thefe drains was 880 yards, and the expence of labour and materials three halfpence/)-?
191253818The name is iuppofed to have been derived from hence, that Handing ready to give the ftroke, he aiked, ylgon''1?
191253818The third time, on being alked, a M ho he was? ” he aniwered, ” I am your king, the king of Sion and drawing his fword, he cut the cord afunder.
191253818The unclean fpirits expelled by Chrift, begged, ne imperaret ut in abyjfum irent, ac¬ cording to the vulgate •, w?
191253818The.people are fugitives from all 1] A B Y nations, but e?
191253818Their ftature was lowrer than that of other heard that the inhabitants of Arabia, Ethiopia,& c. ufed locufts as food.?
191253818There is alfo a manufactory of fire arms, and a confi¬ derable trade in grain, lint?
191253818There is indeed extant, in the Pfeudo- Hege- lippus, a letter from Pilate to the emperor Claudius, t# 7/?.
191253818They have this advantage, how-*"""v~''— ‘ ever?
191253818This faving on every Pl ° Uj?
191253818This propofal was readily em- arj?
191253818This ■ worthy divine died on the 20th ol April I7 ° 3?
191253818Thofe Diieaf t. w?
191253818Thus the aliquot parts of 12, being 1, tia 2?
191253818To be fatisfied in this, he alked the farmer whe¬ ther he had fet any of the fame potatoes this year, and what was the nature of his land?
191253818To what dark undifeover’d fhore?
191253818What fubftance, for inftance, can be more diffimilar than fulphuric, pruffic and uric acids?
191253818When Jefus had lifted up himfelf, and faw ‘ none but the w''oman, he faid unto her, Woman, ‘ where are thofe thine accufers?
191253818Whither, ah wdiither art thou flying?
191253818Why Ihould not the ocean have the fame power of fertilizing plains near its( bores, that rivers have of fertilizing fmall fpots near their banks?
191253818Why fhould dividing and tranfplanting the roots of wheat caufe the crop to be early, or afford a certainty of its being a( rood one?
191253818[ 233] £ T 1/Elite?.
191253818^ gr0wing?
191253818above the reach of art?
191253818and another to the- adoptive, Whether he confented to become fuch a per- fon ’s fon?
191253818boarcl?
191253818hoc juris hahebat In tantum fortuna caput?
191253818how many more have you yet to kill?
191253818in- flnoig uyiigcyw, s?
191253818or Agone?
191253818other proviftons j but the Turks and Moors being now v — —''entirely mailers of that coatt, the goods he had lent inplie pic"?
191253818rity con- to obferve the Wednefday as a fart inftead of Satur- tered?
191253818to-v—- jp pcr gcots acre?
191253818u the confent of the other, for the fake of having child- ren?
191253818w- and’ring fire, That long haft warm’d my tender breaft, Muft thou no more this frame infpire?
191253818‘ Jefus faith unto her, Woman, where are Adulterr, ‘ thofe thine accufers?
191253818■, alfo to infert between vowels, as eFi?, for cig.
191679019''Nai fe?
191679019, INF[ 248] INF infinite critcs?
1916790192?.)
19167901942] JEW been quite polluted, both with the blood of multitudes Jew?, who had been killed, and in various other wrays.
1916790198?
191679019? erca.
191679019A wilh to relieve?
191679019A. D.> 417?
191679019And are not the majority of men more ftrongly attached to the religion than the government of their forefathers?
191679019And if, after he has pleaded, the prifoner becomes mad, he fliall not be tried: for how can he make his de¬ fence?
191679019And were all of them fools or hypo¬ crites?
191679019Are m> t thefe the dronged indications of their fenfibility?
191679019At this the chancellor fired: “ A trimmer?
191679019But belief, you will fay, is not in our porver, and how can rve believe what appears to us incredible?
191679019But how diffi¬ cult is it to determine whether this principle may not be revived?
191679019But if they w''ere able men, were they infallible?
191679019But is fenfation, or pleafure, or the removal of pleafure, pare inftinft?
191679019But is not this to fet afide the real conftitution of things, and to fubftitute dreams in their place?
191679019But what evidence is there of this?
191679019But, further, to take the cafe of bodies unorganized, how7( hall we account for the phenomena which chemiftry exhibits to us?
191679019Common or Sicilian fwordjijh.—The dorfal fin? A- gladius.
191679019Could the firft reformers hope to deliver the truths of religion more fully and more clearly than the Spirit of God?
191679019Does the irritation of the gums contraft the 2] INS mufcles of the arm?
191679019For is not this fyftem, whether w''ell or ill founded, friendly to fociety?
191679019HYFOGASTRIUM, in Anatomy, the middle part of HYP[ i?]
191679019Had fhe confented to repeal the declaratory law againft America?
191679019Had they found out more apt expref- fions than had occurred to the Holy Spirit?
191679019Have birds any notion of equality, or do they know that heat is neceffary for incubation?
191679019Having thus afeertained what we mean by inftinft, we( hall now proceed to inquire, Whether or not there be any inftinftive principles in man?
191679019Hence arofe two fa£tions-$ one of which adopted the adoration and worfhip of images, and on that account were called iconoduh or iconolatrc?
191679019IMPERATORIA, masterwort, a genus of plants belonging to the pentandria clafs j and in the natural me¬ thod ranking under the 45th order, Umbellate?.
191679019INANITY, the fchool term for emptinefs or ah*, folute*? ntfe!ung Incarna tion.
191679019INF f 247] INF my own good, and with a view to be convinced?
191679019ION[ is Ignath ’?.
191679019IRESINE, a genus of plants belonging to the di- oecia clafs, and in the natural method ranking under the 54th order Mifcellanec?.
191679019It is difficult to conceive, that their( lock of provifions( hould regularly be exhaufted at the year ’s end?
191679019It muff be owned, that the defedl is not in the architedl, but in the order.—Who ever faw a beautiful Tufcan build¬ ing?
191679019Its form is this(?).
191679019JEREMIAH( t/ ii?
191679019Jay, Gwy Michael/
191679019May not thofe innovations in religion, which difeon¬ tent many introduce, lead to all the evils which are caufed by frenzy and fanaticifm?
191679019Nefcio quis tcneros oculis mihi fafcinat agnos?
191679019On the death of the nabob in 1775?
191679019Or, fuppofing that they all perceived the deception, am I then at lait the only ho- neft man who will confefs it?
191679019Other articles of this indrument v 1?
191679019Rondelet, 6?
191679019Sir Edward Hughes having been detained by con¬ trary winds, did not arrive at Trincomale before the?
191679019The Goths were greatly furprifed that he fhould leave hi?
191679019The fpinal marrow is con¬ tained.in the canal which pafles through the vertebra?.
191679019The furniture and decorations of the houfes of perfons of didin&ion confiff in japan- work of various co-?
191679019The neceffity of granting? ain confi “ relief to that kingdom w''as ftrongly fet forth by tbe lord w''ho introduced them.
191679019The rich, within the w''alls were now./ 4.?
191679019They are Atlantic fea?.
191679019This great undertaking is now( 1807) g0”1?
191679019To this the nabob returned for anfwer, ‘ that he never I N D[ 207] I N 15 India, never expei?
191679019Truth is fcarce attainable even by the fureft obfervations 5 and will fanciful conjeftures ever come at it?
191679019What fliould I fay?
191679019What motive then can induce me to divulge my doubts of its authen¬ ticity?
191679019Whatever claim they may have in right of food and felf- defence( to which ought we to add the purpofes of the naturalift, explained above?)
191679019Why might they not be afterwards gradually introduced into our fmall rivers?
191679019Will it ferve my country to introduce difeontent of any fpecies?
191679019Would the Romans have chofen that order for a temple? ” The expence of building that church was 45 ° o1.
191679019and is it any evidence of oursy that rve are not there¬ fore induced to treat them with a more fympathifing tendernefs?
191679019and is this inference ill founded?
191679019and would file refufe to repeal that againft Ireland?
191679019are divines in vogue and power commonly the molt knowing and upright?
191679019ents~, upon the minds of men in their own devifed terms and expreftions?
191679019fajnt?
191679019for example, W hether the bread belong¬ ed to them when they w’ere eating it, or to the pope, or to the Roman church?
191679019ft''Jew?.
191679019jo6 Defeats the India?
191679019of Chriftians their own decifions concerning gofpel- faith and dodlrine?
191679019or hath he delegated his powrer to any particular perfons?
191679019or who were the firft reformers?
191679019that the blood which has congealed, and acquired a folid form- •IAN[ 3 t1-»nuariu?, form by age, is no fooner brought near the bead of the Jaruaiy.
191679019~v — i n k r that tli?
191679019“ But even if they were infallible, w''ho gave them commiffion to do what the Spirit of God had done al¬ ready?
191679019“ Dnpatrii, indigetes?
191679019“ Lo 1 the heavens are open; if you enter not now, when will you enter?
191679019“ Shall we alk here, Who taught the bees the pro¬ perties of folixls, and to refolve problems of maxima and minima?
192547777* 3 Thus Conftantius acquired.?
192547777.//,//?.
19254777710 Colleges, academic?, and fchools.
192547777113 The form of the( hell depending on the external form Umbilicu?
1925477771] COO bed place for edablidiing a colony would be either on Cook ’* the banks of the Thames or in the bay of Blands; each D''t J<:fie?
1925477775.?
19254777764, Vp is a tranfverfe, and Q?
19254777765 Number of Species included under each Genus, in/£
19254777777,7?.
192547777: HD ’ DK:: Ed''d e\ h d- d k but ED • D
192547777: PG, therefore P/>: PG:: P/>z: Q?
192547777:: Q?
192547777:: Q?
192547777?
192547777? ms to hay ® an^n fror?
192547777? ms to hay ® an^n fror?
192547777? s.
192547777And Mr orders in a perturbation whereof confufion conflfls: Shuckford maintains, that the confufion arofe front e.
192547777And becaufe dG and
192547777And he adds, ‘ I will reprefent t e ftory in its own fimple garb, without any artificial colouring, fo that my readers may be the more inclined W?
192547777Angles of the pentagon CPRGL, L= 121 ° 35''I?"?
192547777Angles of the pentagon CPRGL, L= 121 ° 35''I?"?
192547777Angles of the rhombus p* r y, p or r= T?
192547777At this Bajazet was fo highly of- fiegesCon- fencle3?
192547777Ba¬ jazet, alarmed at the danger that threatened him, raifed I5?
192547777Being alked one day in full company, wThich of his works he thought the beft?
192547777But being then in a lethargic fit, he anfwered from the purpofe; upon which he was again afked whether he did not name his eldeft fon Richard?
192547777But how was this to be effedled?
192547777But why are the fame edges and the fame faces attraCled in the fame way?
192547777CONSEQUENCE, in Logic, the conclufion 01?
192547777E. Lon?.
192547777E.) there¬ fore Q?
192547777E.), CP*+CQ^—CR*-f CS% therefore P/>*-f. Q?
192547777E.), therefore Qj?
192547777Enumera- precedin?
192547777Flax? nade to refemb/ e Cotton.
192547777For is ment ‘ it found upon farther experience, that capital puniffi- ments are more effedtual?
192547777Gen. Char, The animal a tethys?
192547777H. fubumbilicated, fmooth; whirls convex jrre/ tfcvv?.
192547777He died on May 15• 337?
192547777If he had a fon of his own blood, why did he adopt Leucus?
192547777If in the trapezoid einih, or any other fituated at the fummits, the diagonals e i, m h be drawn, the height
192547777If the diameter Q?
192547777In the fame way it may be demonftrated that « g — g E, and that the triangles P^E,^Ltz are fimilar, and therefore that PE: E^ ‘''-gn or L
192547777It Cook ’s commenced in the year 1772; and, as in the former, Dlfcovene?
192547777It may be fuppofed, that CRYSTALLIZATION, Pheno- that the matter of the fides of the veflel determine?, t mena.
192547777It was on account of the ex-?
192547777Jerufalem had been taken, and Paleftine con-* Se*/r;? ‘ quered, by Omar the fucceflbr of Abu Beer*, who ia''1 ’ fucceeded Mahomet himfelf.
192547777Let DE J an ordinate to the diameter ¥ p meet the arch PLI anywhere in G, if the point L is between 3^ 2 P 54?
192547777Let DE be a femi- ordinate to the diameter P/, let PG be the parameter of the diameter, and Q?
192547777Let DE be a femi- ordinate to the tranfverfe dia¬ meter P/>; let PG be the parameter of the diameter, and Q?
192547777Let DE*/be an ordinate to the tranfverfe diameter pa and let Qf be its conjugate diameter, PE • E/>: DE*:: P/>*: Q?*.
192547777Let DE: DE*:: P/»s: Q?*.
192547777Let P/ », a diameter of an ellipfe, be parallel to DE
192547777Let P/>, Q?
192547777Let P/>, Q?
192547777Let R r, S j- be the axes, and Vp, Q?
192547777Let Vp, Q?
192547777Mediterranean, rr?.
192547777P/>: Q?
192547777P/>: Q?
192547777S. fmooth, white, the broader part ftraight,? ix\&probofei- traniverfely plaited; 2 to 4 inches long.
192547777Secondly, the triangles PSN, PHM are fimilar, therefore PN: PS but PS: CQ^ therefore PN: CQ^_ PM: PH j( CCL: PO::) Q_f: PM, Q.?
192547777See Botan?
192547777See Cornus, Botany/Wes?.
192547777Shall they die to avenge a private quarrel between us?
192547777T. clavated at one end, incurved at the other jc/ aw?.
192547777That he ftiould have the power and boldnefs to put his prince and mafter to an open and infamous death?
192547777The fourth experiment was made January 7th 1782?
192547777The next morning, when one of his phyficians came to vifit him, Cromwell alked him, why he looked fo fad?
192547777The next queftion to be determined is, to w hat degree of latitude the northern coaft of Afia extends before it •inclines direftly weft ward?
192547777The triangles DEH, CL m are evidently equiangu¬ lar, therefore DH: DE:: Cw: CL, hence CL* DHrrDE* C m, but DE* C or C
192547777The word comes from the Greek xorpts, world, and 7r*\ts, ctly.—One of the ancient philofophers being interrogated what countryman he was?
192547777The^tc uHk?
192547777Thou fooliffi woman, fayefl thou that, the prieft can¬ not make the holy body of Cbrift?
192547777Thus Ti- tius and his brother are related •, why?
192547777To what fource muft we attribute thofe inteftine dif- fenfions?
192547777V. tapering, a little ventricofe; longitudinally rug- o/ i?.
192547777Was the vaft territory of all the Ruffias worfe regulated under the late emprefs Elizabeth, than under her more fanguinary predecef- fors?
192547777What ffiall become of her, fay you, my lord?
192547777What if a moufe eat it after confecration 5 what ftiall become of this moufe?
192547777What real dependence, therefore, could there be on the accuracy of the account given by a youth of that age?
192547777What then is the opinion which on the whole we are to form of the admirable Crichton?
192547777Whilfl flaying at Rio de Janeiro, a melan¬ choly obfervation was made of the prodigious w7afte of human lives with which the working of the Portu-?
192547777Whom, next to Tel¬ lus, he deemed moft happy?
192547777Why did he intruft to him the government of the ifland, when he promifed him his daughter in marriage?
192547777X3 ‘ I4'') ’? lre found alfo under that of the regular o&ahedron.
192547777You and I have quarrelled; but thefe wrarriors, what have they done?
192547777[ 497 I CON mountain, how art thou fallen?
192547777becaufe both are derived from one father: Titius and his firft cou- fln are related; why?
192547777by leflening the dangers coo[(> 35 1 COO book ’s dangers and dlftreffes formerly experienced n. thofe pifcoverie?.
192547777faponica?
192547777jUgate to P/>; the tangent H/?> is equal to the diame- v- t''"''ter Q,^.
192547777lefs civilized, lefs facial, lefs fecure?
192547777or what is the caufe of the fame bodies in the fame circumftances affuming regular fi¬ gures?
192547777ter?
192547777thefe circumftances?
192547777tified by parliament in this year j and the fubfcription Covenant?
191678901! »#& •:^ J « NX>:?> lit: JlillluH 1* vi«r ».
191678901''Let pzz^ a-\-?
191678901''g?
191678901),
191678901* L.eco?
191678901* When this vibration is ended, by the oppofition of the?
191678901* Z be= 4?
191678901,/^m/!///''/< tt"
191678901.)U °~og?*.
191678901.4- aa''r> •^ t s/y • y ■ c/ L- t A''^H F- Sj^"--i 4* A, c?
191678901.—j K CV-/?''
19167890113- feed of the goofeberry;?
191678901134?.
1916789012 3 3- 4- 5- 6? ■ 8.
1916789014(/>+?
191678901>* 6^-'',.A?
191678901?
191678901? Ute account of thefe events to ThQ Modern Univerfa l Hi/ lory, vol.
191678901? sde Phyf.
191678901?.
191678901A a A?
191678901A great many queftions will here fuggeft them- felves, as, How does it happen that the motion is pro¬ duced?
191678901A?
191678901A^ A.,^"/\ i Ay>/< z 7 r V/\-/\// h\/^ f''-"A/^~/~ —^''\\ x''*\ j sy-/> • 7 g?
191678901Attached to the fork is the arm m 22, of fuch length that, when the pendulum rod is perpendicular, the an¬ gular diftance oi n q from the rod
191678901But this fubjeCl will, ere long, be fully eftablifhed on a ferie?
191678901But what do you make of the witches meetings, cried Bodinus?
191678901By this motion, the lever a£ts on the ratchet- wheel
191678901Eefides, it may be alked, Is there not a propriety in ufing negative numbers to exprefs the degree of cold, which is a negative thing?
191678901Elate 11XXXVI,(> rf,''2l A y^-/-\ 1/^^"l\ Wat\ T~ y^< 7-£^ — Ar f II o\\ r c °] Q w cv- I V. T/ yn/ i xXcu tn?''
191678901For whither can they turn their eyes more properly than to the light?
191678901From the great extent of Virginia, it may be expell¬ ed that the climate i?
191678901Gan it then be conceived, Mr Davy alks, that a fubftance which forms with mercury fo perfeft an amalgam, fhould not be metallic in its own nature?
191678901He ftudied at the univerfity of Edinburgh the feveral branches of learning with great approbation, particularly WE A V IN G. It''Z''/''crs/?
191678901How, fays Mr Davy, can thefe extraordinary refults be explained?
191678901I?
191678901In IJ95 a Dutch veffel was call away on the coaft, and the ihip ’s company were obliged to winte?
191678901In thofe parts of England where ftone is fcarce, it is ufual to make myalls?.nd hctufes of xnu.d, Wales II ’ Wall.
191678901Is the gas that appears to poffefs the properties of hydrogen a new fpecies of inflammable aeriform fubftance?
191678901It oftener happens, however, that two teethees end on the fame day 5 in which cafe the Year*?
191678901It was 4 feet deep, and had a declivity of 4 inches in a mile,^uery, The mean ve¬ locity?
191678901Let q be the depth of the bog below the furface of the river, oppofite to the the dope of j WAT and-- —?
191678901On what then, it is farther aiked, do the metallic properties of ammonium depend?
191678901Or are thefe gafes in their common form oxides which become metallized by de- oxidation?
191678901Or has nitro¬ gen a metallic bafis, which alloys with the iron or pla- tina?
191678901Or is water alike the ponderable matter of nitro¬ gen, hydrogen, and oxygen?
191678901P c r- y- Hence we derive 2 r — T*x
191678901Plato nxxxv?:.
191678901See Botany Index?
191678901See Mysteries, N °? 4.
191678901She alks then what could be the ufe of thefe veffels?
191678901She firft obferved this in the butcher ’s broom, where 1.. S circle leads direaiy up to the( lower; then in fc0?
191678901Suppofe an inftrument of 30 inches radius, into how''many convenient parts may each degree be di¬ vided?
191678901Suppofe, then, we place the fame bit of wood on the margin of the leaf, what effed ought to follow?
191678901T R I C 4?
191678901T U R[ 5 nty of thefe two celebrated oriental tongue?.
191678901The J W. T- nazrv tS*cicfy?
191678901The Tiro?
191678901The decompofition and compofition of nitrogen feem proved, and one of its elements appears to be oxygen; but wdiat is the other element?
191678901The elevation r Z of the point Z above the equi- capacious fphere is evidently= rO^Xcof.*Z—-fQ.?''
191678901The fuperior alked them in what manner the governor had warned fo many of them in fo fhort a time, at fuch a diftance from his own refidence?
191678901The furfac?
191678901The marc, according to Tillet, is equal to/ 4 gros?
191678901The mechanical confideration of this fubjeft alfo fhows us, that a deeg ffirouding, in order to make a capacious bqcket?
191678901The number of columns into which the marchin?
191678901The plate- leads, or pla- tiues, are flat pieces of lead?
191678901Therefore the audibility of the trumpet, when compared with a fingle voice, may be expreffed by T?
191678901They liftened to his advice; and having had many proofs of his wifdom well as courage, they gave him the command of the army?
191678901This?
191678901We may make ufe of the fimple form On?
191678901What would they not give for milk or ale?
191678901When A, a and M are given, by the firft proportion, f( O—0) is found, and by the fecond 4( O- f
191678901When fhal this be?
191678901When the moon is in the equator, the fuperior and inferior tides have equal heights, in? »!
191678901Wherever then the av^e?
191678901Xenophon appearing at a lofs for a reply to this unex- pefted falutation, Socrates proceeded to alk him, where honeft and good men were to be found?
191678901\Vnn^f V S''cu fy?
191678901^^4/ T''^''-r-^/ A- i I Ax f''''< £?
191678901^uerify The number of Scotch pints which this pipe fhould deliver in a minute?
191678901a- w> eek?
191678901and then, from and j( fi —?
191678901cipai caufes nf war, by throwing obdacles in the way of Soo?
191678901comes naturally as a queftion, Why does the motion become fo extenfive?
191678901each of 15 fathoms, and from the points D and E, taksu k 614. w Military taTien for the centre and diftance of 25 fathoms, he de-, 1,1 u? ‘.
191678901folved in wane, efpecially in very deep coloured red wine?
191678901for 4(/> —?
191678901how comes it that there are regular motions and paufes,& c.?
191678901how does it become fo extenfive?
191678901how is the impulfe communicated to the origin of the petiole?
191678901how many of thefe parts are to go to the breadth of the vernier, and to what parts of a degree may an ob- fervation be made by that inttrument?
191678901i-?
191678901l^7 8 64? 0 8 Marc.
191678901ndlculous compound of lies, chimeras, and impoffibihties, and( how s what might be expeaed from fuch a man. ” Hi/?, of England.
191678901prefents itfelf muft then be, how to difpofe them or this ufe?
191678901within that formed by the front and centre rank?.
191678901— p:, which is the fame with 2 G H 2 G ’ V?
191678901“ What bufinefs, think you, can I have had time to do( replied Vandyck)?
191678901•; fe » 6?
191678901•^\''r- v-''As- r;^''■*''''''.S?
192545785!< •-V- ’ 7 37 9.26470 9.26^38 9.266015 6?
192545785''? 98.
192545785( 2?
192545785(?)
192545785(?)
192545785.007241 3.85980? 3 Defcription amt Ui''e of the Table.
1925457851097I04021: 1098040601^ 04I00i39 ° 4I39;^o 1066,02776 1067,02816 1068 02857 1069 02898 1070 02938 51071( 1072 1073 1074 10 r?
19254578516 28i7 449791I?
19254578529 28 27 26^5 24 23 22 21 IO.241199.9381912 9.93811 ° 9.93804?
19254578529 28 41 o 39 1 45 37 63 49 70 5?
1925457852910.2394419- 93775;?
1925457853 5(9.68671? 3 9- 74375; 9- 74405: 9- 74435 9- 74465 9- 74494 9.74524 6(9.68694 22 23-|23 99.68762^ 23 22 23 23 22 23 22 23 22 23 22 Tang.
19254578545 46 46 46 45 46 45 46 45 45 46 45 45 46 45 48 47 46 45 9.9822643 9.98222 9.98218 9.98215 9.98211 9.98207 9.98204 9.98200 9.98196 9.98192 31 3?
19254578552 9- 82439 x7 9- 95240 26 io-0476o, 9.87198 53j9- 82453 Ili9- 952662 10.0473419.871871, 54 9.82467 ITii9- 95291 2610* 04709i 9- 87175i; j?
192545785639 90644 006 CO 90655 90660 8c I?
192545785709785107, 709885114?
1925457859 9.758523o 9.75588 9.75617"9.7564730 9.7567^ 9 9.75707^ 9.94069 9.94062''9.94055?
1925457859- 87887!^ 60 59 58 57 56 IO^i 54 53 52 51 5 ° 49 48: 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 4?
1925457859- 97567 19- 97563 19- 9 7558! 9- 975544 i9- 9755 °?
1925457859- 97597(4 10.46550 9.97593- 10.46508"■-Q-^ 9- 97589,5 9- 97584L 10.46426 9.97580 10.463859.97576,?
1925457859- 99989;t4 n.64971 11.64410 11.63857 H.633U 8.46817 8- 47245 8- 47669; 20 8- 48 ° 89!lJ?
1925457859.90924 9.90915 9.90906 9.90896 9.90887? 36 9.90869 9.90860 9- 9o85I 9.90842 9.90832 9.90823 9.90814 9.90805 Sin.
192545785978 9782 9783 9784 9783 9786 977499 ° °?
192545785: 8o Nature of «*( «+?)
192545785; 9- 93833;; 9.93826 V 60 59 58; 57 36 55:> 4 53 52 51 5 ° 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 4_o 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 3?
192545785?
192545785? 4 Dr Halley thought that the north magnetic pole was as^to the near Baffin ’s bay in North America.''
192545785? r Spanilh wTalk.
192545785?!
192545785?./, o9,i °.7i677 Oo, IG.71600 08 xo-71541 56:9.27799 5719.2786465 9.2866.
192545785?|''9- 53738 19- 53779 37 D.1 Cot.
192545785A( hip from a port in latitude 56 ° N*fails S. W. by W. till( he arrives at the latitude of 40 ® N: Required the difference of longitude?
192545785Again, we have a rA —=: — 5-—rA but here A — B is the index of that b rB Q power of r which is equal to?
192545785At that time almoft all the fciences w''ere loft; and why not magic as w''ell^as others?
192545785But how can any third idea ferve to difcover a- relation between two others?
192545785But what have we to do with thee?
192545785Could they defend themfelves by any other means from our artil- Madagaf- lery and bayonets?
192545785D. 74710 74718 74726 74733 7474?
192545785Experx- perience; from which we infer the exiftence of thofe ence> the objedt?
192545785For what would it avail him to know good from bad aftions, if he had no freedom of choice, nor could avoid the one and purfue the other?
192545785His mailer, furprifed at his exad obedience, alked, How it was pollible for him to eat fuch a naufeous fruit?
192545785How is a long word at the end of a line to be divided?
192545785How is the error of fubftituting one word for* another to be reClified?
192545785I 10.56145 10.56095 10.56046 10.55996 IO-55947 10. c c8g8 io.55849 IO-55799 I0- 55750 Io-55701 10.55652 10.?
192545785If on the line AN mit curve, both ways indefinitely extended, be taken AC, CE,''"plate-EG?
192545785In both thefe the motion?
192545785In like manner let 1—u be fubftituted for?/, and we have log.
192545785In the Tower, the curiofities of which at?
192545785Is it not the chief employ¬ ment of our feveral courts of judicature to determine in particular inftances, what is law, juftice, and equity?
192545785Is it not then a matter of aflonifhment, that hiftorians and philofophers have hi¬ therto paid fo little attention to longevity?
192545785Is it of no ufe to mark the various fallacies in reafoning, by which even the moft ingenious men have been led into error?
192545785It is divided into two capi- tanias, named Funchal and Maxico, from the towns of thofe c Madeira?
192545785January, 7''February, 8 March, April, May, June, July, Auguft, September, Oclober, Nobember, December, II I 2 13 13 13 1 2 II IO for the g// 52 I?
192545785LOHOCHj or LOCH, in Pharmacy, a compofition?
192545785Living — — t???
192545785Living — — t???
192545785Living — — t???
192545785Lorrain, Robert/
192545785May not thofe who in¬ habit woods be allowed to live, without knowing who thou art, and whence thou comeft?
192545785Nothing has fo much effect in^ impairing the power of a magnet as keeping it in anj[on?
192545785Of what importance is it in many cafes to decide a- right whether an aflion fhall be termed murder or manjlaughter?
192545785Or their change of ftate, in confequence of the adlicn of nature, produce alfo variations?
192545785See Hematoxylon*, Botany and?
192545785See Money- To Zi/?.
192545785That is, a dilemma is an argument in the? nodus tollens of hypothetical fyllogifins, as logicians love to fpeak.
192545785The fceptre, with the dove, th(?
192545785The monarch then alked him if he had any doctor with him, and if he was a great do£tor, and a king ’s doctor?
192545785Thefe are nov?
192545785They are, however, very fpirited 5 though not equa?, upon the whole, to thole of his friend Albert.
192545785This point fet¬ tled, let us next inquire what thofe ideas are which are capable of being thus unfolded?
192545785To what elfe can we attribute this extraordinary mortality?
192545785We( hall in future denote this modulus by M; fo that the formula expreffmg the common lo¬ garithm of any number y will be W. v= M 5v- z>*+& c?
192545785What can the Lydians gain by the ccnqueft of Perfia; they who enjoy all the ad¬ vantages of which the Perfians are deftitute?
192545785What then are the grounds of our judgement in rela¬ tion to faffs?
192545785What then is the import of fuch general terms?
192545785When they meet in their incorporn^ ca- London, pacitjq they wear deep blue iilk gowns: and their.?
192545785_ 98735 971498740 97x5 98744 I9711 iP?12 9718 19716 98749 b?1?
192545785ench 5] M A D hatred?
192545785fince AL is ten times greater than A c, LM{ hall be the tenth term of the feries from unity-, and becaufe A
192545785the Atyadse, the Heraclidae, and the Mermnada?.
192545785the formula will be transformed to n*0+ 5) O—1?)
192545785then there 3 LOG will arife a new7 feries of proportional?
192545785“ And dar’ft thou threat to fnatch my prize away, “ Due to the deeds of many a dreadful day?
192545785“ Can it be by chance, then, that thefe elements, found more than 40 years ago, fhould accord fo well with ours founded on recent obfervations?
192545785„ 9- 53697?
191253837!.herel0yS> to Dr Lewis, is Papilla^ rTT?
191253837''1^^^ arid 3 lo^] opa% humming bird.—Red 3 middle tail feathers Pk bdZln ”?
191253837, r The following fummary of his life is copied uom OldyS ’s MS. notes on Fuller ’s Worthies: Old Parr was born 14835 lived at home until ij00?
191253837-Axe we certain that, amid her countlefs produc¬ tions, nature recognizes a tingle line of demarcation?
1912538371''his bird is Wy fond of honey and bee maggots; but being unable, by its own efforts, to procure them from the hollow of Pka?.
191253837399 Rofe- coloured pelican.—Rofy •, gullet pouched?
19125383783?
191253837?
191253837? M B: ®* 4^^1 v- l bp#, 4-.
191253837A man, who is unacquainted with the form and confirm?
191253837And to this allegory, accord- f t?
191253837As to difeafes, we faw none who laboured under any during our ftay, except the venereal complaint; cough?
191253837Being allied, if he did not intend to fill it up: No, faid he", do- not you fee my leaving it empty is what precifely conftitutes the picture?
191253837But before what court ihall this impeachment be tried?
191253837But to what divinity wras it made?
191253837But will not filial gratitude operate and decide in favour of the parents?
191253837But( will you believe me?)
191253837By varying the height and diredlion of his light, he may eafily dilcover fuch accidental effefts as are moft likely to recommend hi?
191253837Can any leiTon be more de-''--nr- w grading?
191253837Captain Cook then afked if the plantain were for the Eatua?
191253837Cur imprudenti cognita culpa mi hi ejl?
191253837Do they ever trouble their heads about fuch niceties?
191253837Does not the fifth com¬ mandment declare more ftrongly in favour of the parents, than any other divine precept does in favour of the children?
191253837Does not the perfon, either mediately or im¬ mediately owe his prefent pow’er and abilities to re¬ lieve, to his parents?
191253837EccL Hi/?, vol.
191253837Fi?.
191253837For Alexander Necham* writes, “ Italy* T)~e Na- clalias- fuperior knowledge of civil law; but the ftudytuia Re- cf/-//.w, Lb,?.
191253837From obfervations of the tranfits of this planet, in 1761 and 17^ 9?
191253837Green turtle.—Brafs- green above, purple- violet be- pr.^.?
191253837He continued in this city for fome time, flill outwardly profeffing popery j but at lall, weary of diffembling, he repaired to Amfterdam, where?
191253837He then afked if they facrificed men to the Eatua?
191253837He was then afked if towtows, who had no Bogs, dogs, or fowls, but yet were good men, were ever facrificed to the Eatua?
191253837He who was condemned by 6000 of his fellow citizens, was obliged to quit the city with¬ in ten days; for 6000 voices, at leafl, were requifite t
191253837Hence to fuch a ° r a iSrt0^ a% IUli for holding piRTnT AMFM^r136?
191253837How could the father acquit himfelf in fo tender and delicate a conjuncture?
191253837I 2 ditto linfeed oil, 2 ditto fpirits of turpentine?, 32 ditto vinegar.
191253837If it be afked, Which is the propereft time for thefe ftudies?
191253837If they facrificed to the Eatua hogs, dogs, fowls,& c.?
191253837If w e were to inquire why painting in frefco is new?
191253837Ihefe were all to be brought out of the''94] PAR country to London by eafy journeys, the eharce bein?
191253837In 1673?
191253837In fummer, the exceffive heats are mitigated by gentle breezes, which conixantly begin at eight or nnm in the^moimmg^aize, manloc?
191253837In grafs- land, a fmall trench may be made around the roots of the tree, w''hen planted, in order to receive the leave?.
191253837Inhabits New Guinea; 2(j?
191253837It bore the following infeription: I am OST- AlANDES, king of kings; whoever will dfpute with? jie this title, let him furpafs me in any of my works.
191253837It was, however, fomething improper in the family and court of Auguftus, as thefe lines feem to indicate: Cur ahquid vidi?
191253837J''ate 0 Pi G[ 453 3 the tongue,?.nd the tubeas alfo on tne tnicKnefs of oclaves the tongue, the figure of the tube, and the quantity of wind.
191253837JVL Tillemont fixes the ele- vat''on of Caracal!?
191253837No mortal, indeed, muft: ever expeft to rife to that fublimity; yet all Ihould aipiie to it?
191253837OXFORPSHIRE, which made part of the ter¬ ritory O X Y[ 61^x-?ar1,?
191253837PALESTINE, in its prefent ftate, is a part of Afiatic Turkey, fituated between 310 30''and 330 ic?
191253837PALT Bende, is when the efcutcheon is divided by perpendicular lines?
191253837PANDORA, in fabulous hiftcry, a woman formed by Prometheus, to wdiom each of the gods gave fom?.
191253837PAR Favilon[ taught to expeft a certain defirable event 5 from what?
191253837QRIBASIA, a genus of plants belonging to the pentandria clafs, and in the natural method ranking under the 47th order, Stellate?.
191253837Smith indeed fays, that, he has mentioned fell his? nateria!
191253837Sometime?
191253837The Captain then afked if any earees were?
191253837The button, which is very brittle, being broken to pieces, is to be fufed again with white arfenic and pearl alhes as before, and the metallic maf?
191253837The dignity and independence C 7S6 J PAR? i,0rc5“ed f''?Vnore So d^ys at a dme. IWi*,*.
191253837The filk branch has evidently declined, but the muflin has fo 4 T far^ hler Hory is lingular: In the year 131?
191253837The fitua?
191253837The inhabitants have confiderable manufactures O S O''[* u£l?
191253837The nuncio finding that little notice was taken of hi?
191253837They breed m the Gape de Verd ides, particularly in that of Sal, conftruamg a neft a T 2 of 5io Grail?
191253837They line the infide with the fame down, but not wo- 4 ven, that their young may lie foft j they ftiut it above PaiTere?.
191253837They’are teat v hybeTalf* Ihe brilliancy of their colouring Thf t?
191253837To a mere goat, or to fome fuperior principle animating the goat?
191253837To the nitric folution( 5O?
191253837Weight about two ounce?
191253837What aie the fentiments in this relpedl that are alone worthy of a rational being?
191253837Which way, for example, can the meafures of trees in general be determined, as vTe determine thofe of the human body?
191253837Who can account for the different reds feen in dif¬ ferent clouds, at the very moment that thefe reds receive the light but in one place?
191253837Will he, by refcuing me from fuffering, do a benefit to me, and no injury to others? ’ He will then be a noto¬ rious delinquent, if he.
191253837^?
191253837^Ret!/U\0ate?
191253837_, 28?
191253837_? 21 Wood larh.—Head furrounded by a white annular Arlorea.
191253837aS fnlmv?
191253837and are not they on that ac¬ count heft entitled to relief?
191253837are we to draw conclufions from an example, which, far from deciding the difpute, gives occafion to another?
191253837been decompofed into, Black oxide of manganefe, 90- 5 ° Water, 7- Oxygen gas, 2.25 00.7?
191253837deiign is in the fame art what propriety of language is in writing, and a juft utterance of founds in mufic?
191253837f 0 T when a letter was written by the fpeaker to? U''ft T in ’ the judges, to flay proceedings againft a privileged per- Srf I, ’.
191253837f pantj}gon Hence his fymbol was a living he- goat, the moft fala-]? gypti0 m cious of all animals: “ Hircum Mendefium coluntrum.
191253837feci?
191253837for what reafon are they painted?
191253837iron, or removed all appearance of thefe impreffions in three days; and that they made ufe of this fecret when they fare reafon?
191253837l0p;?
191253837m. p. 6\ 2?.
191253837many fad inftances of it?
191253837w v*xviiiv.?
191253837with abhorrence?
191253837‘ Ta yx?
191253837’ hlZ?
191253837“ He appears( fays an elegant au-#//?.
191253837“ What fuch an.author has told, who would tell a- gain?
192545786(< IS r ® i ®?.••-&:.
192545786* i With refoefl to the quantity of food to be aftually? roper taken, this muft be regulated much by the appetite and quantity of^ fUpply required.
192545786- V- VfK-=""''''''r''V''’''"V, t*, t, r jf- I/r''^^ W^; V''I^ I ip^ j*:? § Si,.
1925457861 2?''.
1925457862201 tO 1293, or t*?
1925457863S3? owder of fcammony with calo- mel.
19254578645?
1925457867?
192545786
192545786> V%?
192545786>- iuZ-<^ ■ •?
192545786?
192545786?
192545786?
192545786? • 453- 135 336 p. 452.
192545786? •/ 466 M A M M A L I A.
192545786Aa fpoa.n 744 II i ft or v''of Simple and Officinal Medicine?.
192545786Aloe perfoliata, E. ALOE SOCOTO- A1jjs76 RINA?
192545786An opinion ot an oppofite nature, though equal- nnf^TiUP''ly extravagant> been maintained by Pivati( s), tome toy an
192545786AnT- EATERS?
192545786Animal mucus, hartftiorn jelly, veal and chicken broth, and perhaps oil, fat and cream?
192545786Ardtium lappa, burdock decoBion?
192545786But who were thofe aged and infirm templars to whom Clement is fo compaffionate?
192545786Cataplafm of cum- 43?
192545786Cocos butyracea, yW? « oil.
192545786Conium maculatum?
192545786Could the moll enlightened man do more? ” He well knows when he is mocked, or otherwife ill treated.
192545786Cover the upper orifice of the funnel, and infert its tube into an¬ other glafs vefiel, fo th?A th?
192545786Delphinum ftaphifagria?
192545786Did they purloin any man ’s treafures? — Of theft they were never accufed.
192545786Dofe about half 73?..
192545786Dr Andrew anc* refin?''
192545786For when the judge alked Eulogius, his dea¬ con, Whether he would not worlhip Frudtuofus?
192545786Gummy refinous fubllances, fuch a?
192545786He compofed memoirs of his own lire, which were publilhed by the abbe Goujet, 1755?
192545786How happened it that her apartments difpleafe J her.this year, and neither fooner nor later?
192545786I hofe who Would be informed of the man- Mariue?
192545786I p. i* W m p:^P^ ft>''■/ fiV f-f^''''A?
192545786I?, l''*.’ol/ ‘ ’ H-''i*1!
192545786In the courfe of their journey, the Iron Mafic was, one day heard to afk his keeper whether the king had any defign on his life?
192545786In the day time they are generally kept faddled at the door of the tent, prepared for any''excurfion?
192545786In which clafs then are wre to rank thefe innocent men?
192545786Is it abfolutely neceffary, that the Ton Ihould inherit the bodily difeafes, and the mental debility of his fore- fa- thers?
192545786Is it likely?
192545786Is it, therefore, fo very aftonilhing, that, w7ith fo many advantages he was able to capti¬ vate the queen fo far as to induce her to marry him?
192545786Is not this to affaffinate an enemy with his hands tied behind his back?
192545786Is not this to reproach a foe who is deprived of the organs of utterance?
192545786It is exhibited in fubftance j in the form of powder,* u?
192545786J^'', W1-*/ J"/* 4^> 7#''-& ’* •,-> v- ir?
192545786M. de St Mars w7as alarmed at the fight 5 and alked the man with great anxiety, whether he could read, and whether any one elfe had feen the plate?
192545786MATERIA M E D 1 C A,& e. 7?.
192545786Nicotiana tabacum, tobacco?
192545786Of what importance is it to us when a manager of the revenue glitters from head to foot wuth gold?
192545786Officinal Medicine?.
192545786Ovxs, Sheb?.
192545786PART MATERIA M E D I C A,& c. •68?
192545786Rofmams, i- Rofmarus, Arftic Walrus — This is a very ArcticWal- large animal, growing fometimes to the length of 18 ms. feet?
192545786S. Sagitta?
192545786Saccharum officinarum, yi/§7JC- r/7/ i?.
192545786Shall we excufe all this by faying, lanturn religio potmt fuadcre malorum?
192545786Strychnos nux vomica?
192545786The Egyptians( as Mr Haffelquift in¬ forms u?)
192545786The good or bad choice be makes is called- yoi//!?.
192545786Thefe burgeffes pof- — 1 v- neet all the powers of the perfons ele&in?
192545786They were indeed com¬ pared with other waitings*, but w''ith what writings?
192545786To what perceptible property in opium are we to aferibe its narcotic powers?
192545786U6 Sulphuret
192545786Were not the inhabitants of England, at one period fanatics, rebels, arid regicides?
192545786Were they men fmarting under difeafes infiidied by the hand of heaven?
192545786Were they men wdiofe aged limbs were unfit for the fatigues of a journey, or whofe gray hairs bad excited the pity of the Roman pontiff?
192545786What degree of credit ihould men of pro¬ bity attach to the information thus received?
192545786What muft W’e think of thofe who reproach and vilify the order, upon the uncertain reports of cun¬ ning and interefted men?
192545786What then were their crimes?
192545786When a local and temporary inllitution drew down the vengeance of the Ro¬ man fee, what mull have been its conduft to a lodge of mafons?
192545786When our illuftrious orator was afked, what was his beft fermon?
192545786Whence arifes this difference?
192545786Why give him an Italian name? — They always call¬ ed him Marchiali.
192545786^,:vi;AfeV^?''
192545786a pricft: lie was not even in orders; and who could have hindered her?
192545786among thofe who fuffered or among thofe who were faved?
192545786and wThy confine him?
192545786and why that mafque? — Others have dreamed that he was the count de Vermandois, natural fon of Louis XIV.
192545786bers of people, not only of all the European nations, Marfeilles but of Turks, Greeks, and natives of the coaft of Bar-^?
192545786c. Carbonas Ammonite, E. AMMONIA PRE- r f3* PARATA, L. ALKALI VOLATILE MITE, D.S^mm?
192545786for they knew not what it was. ” For we mull obferve, that the word by which they allied, what is this?
192545786fpirituou?
192545786fuited to remove indammation, plethora?
192545786g e. Oleum animale, L. OLEUM CORNUAnimal oi?''
192545786is called rvwxtx, contubernium •, and the fociety itfelf, fometimes ruvctyaiyA, collegium} feftaj a- vyo}*, nodes; rare?, communitas.
192545786jngS 0 £ pafj~ i0ns?
192545786of his army, and brought to France, without any one v*"“"knowing it?
192545786or is there in the fweet tafle of acetate of lead, any in¬ dication of a deadly poifon?
192545786out one of its fore paw ’s, and fixe?
192545786r?
192545786render the fpirit agreeable to the palate were it not for the large quantity of the grofs oil of the malt that abound?
192545786rulers of Europe?
192545786thontriptics are?
192545786was dif¬ pleafed with her apartments?
192545786{ res of tlie heart, and lavs open the fecret wovk-, ’ »''? p.flinger.
192545786“ c. Alkaline.—Carlsbad, Aix- la- Chapelle, Barege, So?
192545786•''''-"•''f.-.^- fe Si%:^ f^^ f H^% i# Sp--/t^? v<; i-> Xv)$,*''^:i- C, mstt ‘..\ r"''-1.
192545786•- »-i?
192545786■ £ »*//$&?''
191678902& c. on the ob¬ verfe. ” The names of the deities reprefented on the rever- ri?.
191678902* ’ Another fpecies of motion has of late been extolled?
191678902.Pa y — R y1—
1916789021 ben if tne oody A re¬ ceives fuch a momentum as to make it move to a m a fecend, join Fa, and take a point! p lo that F< p:< p a~ F f: fa,
191678902104 The acrimony of the fluids has afforded a large Acrimony field for declamation to fpeculative phyficians, and011^''*?
191678902104- Case 3* When the fame rope paffes round a 10?
191678902177 Modern Medal?.
1916789021?
191678902274 M EDI Febre?.
1916789023* IF;5?.
1916789023Rz- f-2R r- l-?
191678902401?.
191678902; in 159?
191678902; or?/; let it defcend towards tn till it reffs at the point y, then yf — f G •, but y Q is greater than G< p( Eu¬ clid, Book I.
191678902
191678902?
191678902?
191678902? 2 In the beginning of the 16th century, the famous Paracelfus.
191678902? 2.
191678902?, it will therefore de¬ fcend, and as its diftance from f can not change, the pointi/''will rife, and the thread fh will be relaxed.
191678902?.
191678902A tetradrachm w7as named K^9r«T£<7«u?, and had eight or hemidrachms.
191678902Afterwards MAT[ i?]
191678902And if fo, what were they?
191678902And what the interval between vaccination and the variolous eruption?
191678902As foon as the vapour be¬ comes denfe, the nurfes and patients become defirous
191678902At this unhealthy feafon?
191678902BErr/?, BUrz://;.
191678902Befides thefe, the other re¬ markable coins of France are, the blancs or billon groats, firft iflued in 134^?
191678902But w7hat had thefe triumphs or Cicero ’s government to do with Cretan money?
191678902Continue?.
191678902Cynanche( maligna) affefiing th.. tqnfils and mu¬ cous membrane of the fauces?
191678902Diabetes{? nelhtus'')i with urine of the fmell, co¬ lour, and tafte of honey.
191678902Dr Francis Home is the firft who has given any diftinft account of this difeafe; but, fin?
191678902FA or I: W, m W+ i » X''iFB m=: — 2P AF x? AF_ 2tvV FB AF= W+4 « XFB FB: Sin.
191678902FA77?, we have Ymzz: Since F A: F/ » zz Rad.
191678902Genu?
191678902Have any bad effefks occurred in your expe¬ rience in confequence of vaccination?
191678902Have any of your patients had the fmailpox after vaccination?
191678902Hitherto tialequa?"
191678902Horizontal 43.?
191678902How long before it was inferted?
191678902How was it preferved?
191678902I. P: M= BF- AF M: N=/>/:«/ N: W—/3( p: a< P Confequently by compofition PrW= BFXbfxP
191678902I.—In a machine performing wmrk, the powers employed to begin and continue the motion of the machine, are called the/ by?
191678902If B= rB'', and the bodies mutually approach each other, the equation in Cafe 3. becomes^ V—-V
191678902If a weight W be fupported by a hori¬ zontal.lever refting on the fulcra A, B, the preffure up- Fi?
191678902If feveral equal elaftic bodies B, B'''', B''"?
191678902Ifus, Iftiaea K. K. Caius; Kotiors?, Quintus K. KAIE.
191678902In i''uch cafes, Dr Cullen afks, May( mail dofes of emetics be of fervice?
191678902In moil; cafes the copper money of the Greek mo¬ narch?
191678902In the cafe of every fuch occurrence, at what period was the vaccine matter taken from the vehicle?
191678902In the fame manner we may find the centre of inertia of any fyftem o?
191678902In the fegnient of an oblate fpheroid the centre of inertia is diilapt from its vertex by a quantity equal to^ f?]
191678902Irn
191678902Its efficacy uZolheTf c, li1y r d5! rreafi"sthe"it''SrZfe.Ia,!,dSDhsr- f ° re heen f0U'',d “?
191678902Let BMNC be a feflion pf the fpherical furface comprehended between the planes BC, MN, and let EP= a?, ECzzy, DCzrR, and 2= the arc CN.
191678902M EDI Hsemor- vances, ufually become of a milky white colour, and rhitgia?.
191678902Make PCrzDE — v; EC — y; DC — DA — R, and AC= 2;, then it may be Ihewn, as in the laft propofition, that y: R — a?
191678902Mayprne.^] yjAy?
191678902MsyacAo?, Great MES.
191678902On one occafion, a lady of quality alked him, Who was the frjl general of the age?
191678902Phyfometra 3 a flight elaflic fwel¬ ling in the epigadrium, having th?
191678902Pints, g* Dec. n s- 0 TTro- 0.0356-/-JJ re- 0.0712 4 0.089 tre I I''4?
191678902Portraits have always been- MED Entertain- been highly entertaining to mankind j and our author went from js 0f 0pin}on?
191678902Sect.-? 4, Erafs and copper beft preserved by the run: that covers them.
191678902Since the handle FD, fufpended by the hook, H, mud hang in;?
191678902Take S3 a?
191678902The Englifh avoirdupois pound weighs troy grain?
191678902The cents"?
191678902The correfpondence between Leibnitz and Qlden- publithes burg having been broken off by the death of the latter, AlTd?
191678902The fame A-p fanaticifm which led to the murder of this accomplifhed^I
191678902The fame folution, along with the16"?
191678902The fubjeft of fiiclion has been examined at PraAical great length by Amontons, Bulfinger, Parent, Euler, Mechanic?.
191678902The pinion qq drives the wheel t?
191678902The prince of Maurt:-?, Orange, unfuccefsful in every attempt to raife the Mauritania.
191678902The queftion was, Whether blood in a pleurify ought to be drawn from the arm of the affefted fide or the oppofite?
191678902The queftion, therefore, comes to be this: In eftimating the forces of bodies in motion, ought we to take time into confideration?
191678902They are generally of the fame fize with the tWQ pence?
191678902They weigh, Co^ns-, a drachm, and are no lefs than 24 carats fine, accord- in?
191678902This fpecies arofe from a 14 foulnefs of the primse via?, and the effluvia of waters in which hemp had been fteeped.
191678902This machine, which is ufeful for carrying lame P!ate fiones where carts and horfes can not be eafilv obtain^ CCCXXIX''rfi07 T7 f?
191678902Through F draw x Fy, meeting A a produced in x, and B £ in y, then in the fimilar triangles A x F, B y F, we have A.v: B?/~ AF: BF, that is,( Art.
191678902To explain the conftru&ion and advantages* See? bii.
191678902Trctnj''- Meditationcs Analytwce, publifhed in 1769, and Medita-17^ 4> ani^ tiones Algebraicce, and his papers in the PhilofophicaH''?
191678902What was the appearance of the inflam¬ mation?
191678902When the bodies mutually ap¬ proach each other, and when V_\, we have ‘ P- B — B''X B 4- B*? cT Cor 2.
191678902When, after paroxyfms have ceafed, fome Iwel- ling and ftiffnefs ftill remain in the joints, thefe O''01?''
191678902and fince/ —?
191678902c?
191678902denferof0"’ 476''Tlle objca? f machine is to obtain a maxi- forces.
191678902i. p. 1.—See alfo Hennert ’s Curfus Mathefeos applicate?, tom.
191678902if When rtrr?
191678902lc5> faces were very fmall hr ccfpea''to tire force with which JglM''ike fviBion was ditmnijhea by aug- t,.1 f*?
191678902r?.
191678902which threw"light on every department of human knowledge, would willingly ftain his memory with an ungracious imputation?
191678902« E^g £ r7 — ’ tt* T?
191678902— 1 X7X7___ 7 7_ Pa;J4-R/ — 3 X6X64-X X7 X?
191678902“ 1 ft. How many perfons have you vaccinated?
191678902“ Is it the coldnefs of wet linen which is to be feared?''
191678902■---r= — Vzz Xm2-ft2 V Z?
191809865Required the true time of Full Moon in April, Old Style, A. D. 30? 191809865 ''^ f''f,^ 4<< 4( A 1>''*''>> •: r » ’-? lk: »?
191809865''^ f''f",^ 4<< 4( A 1>''*''>> •: r » ’-? lk: »?
191809865), in 1S0 of Aquarius(,^), Mars(?)
191809865* f-v^ S I** « ” •''"''"''* S* 4>^ « V V’t/*''1- j ’''''“"i*,^/S?
191809865*", » ■;/ PI^P I?
191809865,,#?
191809865,?.
191809865.. M''3 c^w S''pfci?
191809865... 252 The latitude of a heavenly body is its diftance from Latitude?
191809865.This fedtron of the earth will be a circle, of which A< 7 is a diameter, and Qj?
1918098651 point is 11 to 25 Or about- 4 to 9 2 points 20- 16-?
19180986555 Apparent equal to tliat in our eartli; in which cafe it muft have Motions of eonfiderable influence in changing the obliquity of the''lyBodieT?
1918098659 32 1 7 33 36 7 27 22 7 21 2 7 14 3 ° 7 7 5 ° 3 ° 29 28 27 7 26 5i 2325 26 i?
191809865? 0 ° a dIreaiy ° tver E ’ where ecliptic FG inter eels the equator JE.
191809865? 3 Thefeus born.
191809865AUTOMATON,( from aura?
191809865And taking away B^~ I3 i''J 29'', which is‘the complement to Vj?
191809865At firft the people of Athens inclined to favour the Athens Me?
191809865At the firft onfet, Melanthus afked his adverfary, why he had, con- trary to the articles, brought a fecond into the field w7ith him?
191809865Augu&u?.
191809865BAHIR, a Hebrew?
191809865Bqt the fubftance of this bla¬ zing meteor was now almoft exhaufted: he was always weak and fickly; and died O&ober?.
191809865But before their defigns w’ere ripe for execution, the Athenian army marched wdth great expedition to Ta- I0?
191809865By what means could the ancieuts move thefe enormous maffes?
191809865Can wre prefume that he wmuld have palled over in fiience fuch a work as the hanging gardens?
191809865Effedts of Taking it for granted, then, that the earth revolves the earth ’s rouncJ tlie fun?
191809865For example, what are the odds of en¬ tering a man upon I, 2, 3, 4, or 5 points?
191809865For the origin of the barber’s^>0/?, fee the article Appellation.
191809865For what is there that a man may not be induced to forfeit to fave his own life?
191809865Full Moon in May 1762, New Style?
191809865Gilimer was after¬ wards brought before Juftinian in gold chains, whom he befought in the moft fubmiffive manner to fpare his „?
191809865Has the player a probability © f gammoning his adverfary or not?
191809865Hence th
191809865Here wre have part of the extended ecliptic marked< Y ’,?
191809865I: ■ mi''i: v; y, f''?m/?
191809865If they knew any one who had it?
191809865If, fays he, this light was caufed by the atmofphere of the moon, of what a prodigious extent muff that at- I3 T mofphere be?
191809865In 1783?
191809865In 1797, the population a- Ayrfliin?.
191809865In computations we begin always at that part of the orbit where the motion of? he fun is floweft.
191809865In xiritam it is denominated leap yea?''.
191809865Indeed what impreflion could they make on it, when they pafs through almoft without obftru- ftion?
191809865It is different at different times, as appears from the variable part? 7i 7;, the product of the fine and cofine of the fun ’s declina¬ tion.
191809865It would be worth while then to inquire, whe¬ ther attraBion is a virtue propagated in time or not$ or whether it moves quicker or flower than light?
191809865J?
191809865LVas it ambition, and a defire of climbing into a higher ftation in the church?
191809865Laws how When a member of the fenate made a motion for a ettabhihed, ngW law?
191809865Looking into, the table, we take the 19th day, which is the neareft to the day wanted: then, accordingly, we find the place of Saturn( T?
191809865Notwithftanding all the pains I took in looking for it after thefe two obfervations, and at divers othc?
191809865Now what could occafron an attention to two years, if they did not fuppofe the equinoxes moveable?
191809865Once more: Can I be fuppofed to favour arbitrary power?
191809865Or fliall wTe fuppofe that the earth, like the Other planets, revolves round the fun in the courfe of a year?
191809865Part I, judgment- feat; hence king''s banc is the fame with the Banc?
191809865Part I. ab, will fee the ftars in the direaion of its length a b, or height
191809865Required the Sun''s true place, March''loth, Old Style, 1764, at 22 hours 30 minutes 25 feconds pajl Noon?
191809865Required the true time of New Moon in July, Old Style, A. D. 2180?
191809865Required the true time of New Moon in May, 0 let Style, the year before Chrijl 585?
191809865Shall we fuppofe all the other planets to revolve round the fun while it alone remains ftationary?
191809865T?
191809865Take it home with you j and let me advile you to abide by it. ’ — ‘ Does your Lordlhip abide by it yourfelf? ’ — ‘ I do.
191809865The afeending node is marked Si, to which the defeendingy node is oppofite below e, but hid from view by the globe e. The half T
191809865The angular motion of the point is called the mean? notion, and that of the fun the real motion.
191809865The be- 3?
191809865The comets, too, are to appearance furrounded with Atmo?
191809865The following detail will Ihow the uncer¬ tainty which has prevailed among aftronomers refpeCt- 140 ing thefe rP0?''
191809865The king found it was^?
191809865The momentary change of obliquity is greatefl; at the oftants, being proportional to v a?
191809865The monkey, the figns of I0''The, cock. ° f hen* 11 • Th?
191809865The office w''as continued in his faitiily,?
191809865The quadratures? ixz thofe points in which the moon is diftant from the fun 90* or 27c0.
191809865The weather was frofiy., November the 22d, the air of Anfwerp in the even- ing gave 1094?
191809865Thefe periodical movements of th(?
191809865Therefore T?
191809865They alked thofe who approached the fick, if they ever had the fame diftemper?
191809865They are reprefented as allies and confederates of the Scots and Pi< fts?
191809865W ’''h?
191809865Was I in- 11 uenced by any dillike of the eftablilhed religion, and fccretly inclined towards a. church of greater pomp and power?
191809865Was money my aim?
191809865What could tempt me to ftep thus out of my way?
191809865What fup- ports this immenfe arch of heavy matter without its reding on the planet?
191809865What maintains it in perpetual concentricity with the body of Saturn, and keeps its furface in one invariable pofition?
191809865When full in the higheft part of her orbit,? e(^r1syper''a fmall deficience appears on her lower edge y andtherouud.
191809865Y Bodies?
191809865^ « s diftance from the axis 3 while its momentum, or power of Pro to u ”?
191809865^ ■* Wh'':::?&<;% ¥ i.
191809865and how he was cured?
191809865and therefore projeded into righ?
191809865baptized after death?
191809865fnCa?
191809865fupponng the tabular radius to be 10,000,000, the na¬ tural fine of 38 ° 1''53"( the arc Zr?)
191809865i''* •- ” j**'',''•''’ tMhiZ''?
191809865i3?
191809865io8 tions^o^the. °* 0cir a^r?
191809865lions of the I heir true motion, however, was only difeovered^Y.6111?
191809865my age, under my infirmities, among utter ftrangers, how ihall I find out proper reliefs and fupports?
191809865oup- pofe a ftar of the firft magnitude fliould have a fmall liar of the twelfth magnitude near it; then will the 12 X I?
191809865out of f ht for a long t;me?
191809865r.3 T7ni\rp » T O?
191809865r?.
191809865the dupendous fidereal fydem we inhabit, this extendve dratum, and its fecondary branch, confiding of many millions of dars, is in all probability r?
191809865wfth?
191809865“ It is not, howr-11,615 may ever, unlikely( fays Dr Long), from the immenfe inter- fometi. J?5?
191809865•%&> S y''^, 4-, ■?
191809865■*:''< 85*>?
192692190!?
192692190,, Ma?.
19269219014 Lycurgus, the celebrated lawgiver of Lacedemon, Among the?
19269219017?, The largeft, for boiling and for finilhing, is 28 inches deep by 38 or 39 wide in the mouth, and 18 in¬ ches wider in the wldeft part.
19269219019S 708 E L £ C T R ErLt£f??
19269219019S 708 E L £ C T R ErLt£f??
1926921902.—Remove the circular piece of wmod GH, By? hldi- from the univerfal difeharger, fig.
19269219064?
1926921908?
192692190; ZTtZ P?
192692190?
192692190?
192692190?
192692190?
192692190?
192692190? 75.
192692190? Utf ° Ur PUpil haS reacllecl the moft critical pe- adopted in ” od of life.
192692190A cheaper 33?.
192692190AB being overcharged in u B, and underchar- ged in// A 1 and CD being overcharged in v D, and^0?.
192692190Alfo the fum of all the dirtances of the particles, fuchas G, is
192692190An improvement on this eletftrometer is to make the? ntnt ° f^''scylinder pretty long, and to have a fmall additional tube jultrument.
192692190And therefore the fum of both fets is/z+ o X?/>+the fum of GH — the fum of DC, or//z X P/>+ the fum of GH — the fum of DC.
192692190Archil gives out its colouring matter to water, Propertie?.
192692190As the virtuous patriot, the honed yet able ffatefman, the Ikilful general, or the learned upright judge?
192692190At tae lame time it was obfervable, that Eiedtricity during the night, the points P and q, as well ’ as the’011 5.egeu “ v_''''a — y?
192692190At that time the king was abient in Hanover, bavin?
192692190But are their magnificent promifes ever fulfilled?
192692190But how is^ this to be accomplifhed?
192692190But though we have thus far, and we hope for ob- CircunL vious.and folid reafons, decided in favour of travelling, ftances that* r,* m/r^;?
192692190But what are the grounds of this eftimate?
192692190Curiofity is to be roufed and chenfhed in the breait of the child: but by what means?
192692190Do they indeed cultivate the underftandings of the young people intrufted to their care?
192692190Do they infill on laborious induftry or intenfe application?
192692190ELECT Fliaiomena l5Ut;)? jemc^ ral^er to retain the dearie pbwer j no>.
192692190Ed E D U[ 558 a new appetite, what''progrefs lias our pupil made> what knowledge has he acquired?
192692190Eledlrici^1 is real, y thc cafe?
192692190For very light lhades, fuch as apple and fea green?
192692190For where in the mean time fliould the firfl words hang and be concealed; or howq after fuch a paufe, be revived, and animated again into motion?
192692190From this place to the foot of Leith wynd, it does not appear how the city was fortified?
192692190From? liberty to Manhoods ft) This age is every way a very important period in human life.
192692190Here feme of the kings of Scotland are interred; and an odd E D I[ 52S 3 E T> I KoddUndofcu,^ counter^"?
192692190How can it be otherwife?
192692190How eafy then would it be to require them to write down an ac¬ count of any new objeft expofed to their obferva- tion?
192692190How will he enjoy his fortune?
192692190I alk, What are then his purpofes for life?
192692190I5^ 3 » t^e provoft, magi- ftrates, and council, the patrons''?
192692190If the bath is pro¬ perly managed, it will be of a fine green, exhibiting on the furface coppery fcales, and a blue? r flower.
192692190In other words, do we know of any caufe that is adequate to the filling and emptying of the fame por¬ tion of air every inftant, for hours together?
192692190In the firft experiment the diminutions were and 5 in the fecond, anci?
192692190Is it impoflible to com¬ municate any ufeful knowledge without them?
192692190Is it improper to call youth to the ftudy of the languages?
192692190It is, Whether it be moft proper to educate a young man pri¬ vately, or fend him to receive his education at a public fchool?
192692190Mr Nicholfon has conftrufted an inftrument for af- Nichoifon ’s certaining fmall degrees of eleCtricity, without, as herPinnin?
192692190Of late, a confiderable improvement in the rubber Wolff?, has been made by M. Wolff, of Hanover.
192692190Of what ufe is thus?
192692190On the 3d of Auguft they went off to the rock, and continued to work as long a?
192692190One of the firfl: queftions that naturally arifes from the very name of fluid is, What proofs have we of the materiality of this power?
192692190Or are they, though highly ufeful, yet not always indifpenfably^ neceffary?
192692190Queen Mary his confort, and Queen Anne, all done by Sir Godfrey At!?
192692190Roxburgh who died feveral hundred years rpi r( • ’ j to belon?
192692190Take a wire of any kind of metal, and cover part, ™ 55?
192692190That he might not, how- tw’tW ™ ln rnem/ t?
192692190The Hiding wire A at top is made to touch the upper e&§?
192692190The moft remarkable public buildings in Edinburgh are —? 8 I.
192692190The^ttado?
192692190Thefe contefts at laft gave occafion to? 9 a revolution, by which the race of Fatemite caliphs revolu- was totally extinguiftied.
192692190There will now be a ftratum GgpH, containing redundant? 13j,:er> and another gp BA containing redundant fluid.
192692190Therefore myY?
192692190They admit, that a force producing an uniformly accelerated motion muft be conftant: they agree with the followers of Des Cartes in the valuation* T?
192692190They have a grate in W,? „ d look into the inner court.
192692190This tine- Singula?
192692190To find what proportion the re¬ dundant fluid in HK bears to that in AB, and what proportion this latter bears to the deficient fluid in DF?
192692190V. The Languages, Is the time ufually fpent In learning the languages ufefully occupied?
192692190Vats of this defcription are fometimes liable to Accident?
192692190W hat were then their circumftances, their arts and manners, their moral principles, and military difeipline?
192692190What advantages can our Bri- tilh youth derive from an acquaintance with the languages and the learning of Greece and Rome?
192692190What an amiable little creature would the boy or girl be, who were brought up in a manner not inconfiftent with the fpirit of thefe few hints?
192692190What then are the means to afeertain this?
192692190What though they comprehend not the meaning of what they learn?
192692190Where( hall truth be found?
192692190Will they be fuch as may aflift the influence of religion on their fentiments and conduct in the future part of life?
192692190With which of thefe parties fhall we join?
192692190Would you make them liberal by fhowing them that the moft liberal is always beft provided for?
192692190Yet why fhould he be oppofed with fo much virulence, or branded with fo many reproachful epithets?
192692190^79 Theory of THE firfl; ele&ricians fuppofed, that ele&rical at- the early tra&ion was performed by means?
192692190a d f< p • 18~7t~ X''U ice were a Alight line,//2-f fp would always be proportional to cl, and might be ex¬ preffed by w Xc m denoting feme numbe?
192692190and kiiled* No fooner was Auletes firmly fettled on the throne, R 6?
192692190but, What effects will this produce?
192692190fire?
192692190humours and excrements, and fitting them for expul- fion.—The word is compofed of the Greek particle and xeTrgo?, excrement.
192692190if it fhould be lod, what fliall be hisrefource?
192692190ii Succeeded by Nechu?.
192692190is this?
192692190lords{ hould attend in their robes or not?
192692190making law?
192692190o n Ai?
192692190occur?
192692190of tbi t?
192692190of which both the white and the black filk appear-? ranf yok ed to adhere more tenacioufly than to either of thell''part u former.
192692190or fhall we mediate between them?
192692190or to regulate the length of his excur- fions, when he is fure that you wall not fuffer him to lofe his dinner?
192692190part of t]ie builJing?
192692190preaching a. s?
192692190preceptor is to provide him with a nurfe, who, as he is new born, mult be newly delivered?
192692190r W • Of Moving error lies in''confidering tl.e motive force as toe fame m Forces both ca{e?
192692190ters of Italy, France, and England?
192692190the verie, as in this beautiful one from Virgil: Crudelis mater magis, an puer mprobut ille?
192692190to furvey the beauties of Homer and Virgil through the medium of a tranflation?
192692190v Is implicit obedience to be exaCted of children?
192692190win be moft fuitable?
192692190x. a?
192692190“ If the deficiency of the eleClric fluid, or rather a Vegetables fmall quantity of it, is apt to be hurtful to vegetables,! njure(1 b?
192692194''I he fame thing obtains in rotations round fixed ate?, as appears by the perfect famenefs of the formulae for both clafles of motions.
192692194( cried he) have I neither friend nor enemy? ” And then running defperately forth, he feemed refolved to plunge headlong into the Tiber.
192692194( faid he), are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Da- mafcus, more excellent than all the waters of Judaea?
1926921944.3?.
19269219453. o. RUPPIA, a genus of plants, belonging to the te- trandria clafs; and in the natural method ranking under the 15th order, Inundate?.
192692194, and/, we 3 Roof.
192692194?
192692194? 5.
192692194? oS Pompey refolves to come to an engage- aienc.
192692194?.
192692194And why fhould the gentleman refufe himfelf the fame pleafure of beholding feientific ingenuity?
192692194At laft Brutus had courage to fpeak to it: “ Art thou a daemon or a mortal man?
192692194B w,:=: 2 X B>?.
192692194Being afked by the emperor, with a ftern countenance, what had brought him there at that unfeafonable time?
192692194But w''hy is fo affe61ing a letter fo often accompanied with an unimpor¬ tant digreflion, an infipid criticifm, or a felf- contradi< R- ing paradox?
192692194But what is the fource of this obligation?
192692194Draw a e parallel to the axis, and draw e c\.o the centre of the circle HKG, and a e?
192692194EpiJL 17. and £/>?/?.
192692194Eut can any general rule be gi¬ ven for this purpofe?
192692194He is ob-,] HON fcure and harfh to the laft degree: faults which he Ronfan?.
192692194Hence a celebrated quellion, Whether ridicule be or be not a ted of truth?
192692194How and is fur- highly he w’as efteemed by his fubjedts appears by their ce^.e^ k?
192692194How much will it rife if it receives an addition which triples its difcharge?
192692194How''?
192692194I he feftion being 150 feet, and the difcharge 174, the mean velocity is 4^ 4?
192692194I1?
192692194If we repeat the calculation with this V= D v= i and v1: V3=~ xv h d''D3 h* and v: V= y: xu H h H But by this remark v*: VJ=/?
192692194In fome other kinds of writing his ge¬ nius feems to have wanted fire to attain the point of per- fe&ion •, but who can attain it?
192692194In th?
192692194In the line g c, which is per¬ pendicular to G^, take^ c to^ A, as A e to A/*, and draw c C parallel to g G, and produce A till it cut eg in/?.
192692194Indeed, hah I look ye, look ye, you do?
192692194Is it more doubtful whether our fenfe of ridicule be the true ted of what is ridiculous?
192692194Is it thus that you emulate your vigilant and laborious grandfire, that Peter the Great whom you have fo often fworn to take for your model?
192692194Is not this fuperftition then an effuflon of gratitude?
192692194It may be here alked, how this fraftion can exprefs an angle?
192692194Let A be perpendicular toc^-, and in A take A
192692194Let me perilli, do I never fay any thing worthy to be laugh’d at?
192692194Let r be the radius vedlor in the one body, and p in the other j now the angular.. tfl. GI.CP wz.yj. CP r r velocities —- — and —?
192692194Might I not wafti in them and be clean?
192692194Not contented with flraring in her company all the delight?
192692194On the other hand, the friends of Gracchus, who were difperfed by parties in different places, cried out, IVe are ready: IV/ iat mujl we do?
192692194One of them had the boldnefs to anfwer him by part of a line from Virgil: U/ que adcone miferum ejl? nori?
192692194One of them had the boldnefs to anfwer him by part of a line from Virgil: U/ que adcone miferum ejl? nori?
192692194PJvcdes Ancient name?
192692194Peterlburgh is anxioufly enquiring whether the tzar has ceafed to live within her walls?
192692194Poplicola having put ROM[ 13,?]
192692194Que veux- tu dire avec ta demi- lune?
192692194Rom?.
192692194She had, in fatt, aflembled an army in Syria to fupport her claims j but now judned it the wifeft way to rely entirely on the decifion o?
192692194Te fouvient- il, vicomte, de cette demi¬ lune, que nous emportames iur les enemis au fiege d’A- fras?
192692194The Agrarian law, which had been propofed fome time before, for equally divid- fturbance?.
192692194The art of compofition, which it is of the firft confequence for an hiftorical painter to underftand, was only to be acquired from th
192692194The effort which h?
192692194The king having recalled him to court, he was made a cardinal in 16223 and?
192692194The natives of Europe were brave?
192692194The other pieces which we find in this new edition of his works?
192692194The queflion is, wdrere to find this fupport?
192692194The reader will naturally afk, after this account of the manufacture, what is the general rule for computing the ftrength of cordage?
192692194The reign of Alexei is rooft remarkable for the im- 97?
192692194The talents, the valour, and defperation of Kofciuiko, could not prevent the Poles from yielding to fuperior number?.
192692194The''axis therefore will remain perpendicular 9?.
192692194Thefe obftruftions, he obferved, were moft effectual in the beginning of its courfc, wfffile yet a fmall rill?
192692194Thefe three A a 2 fuperfluous Rom?.
192692194Therefore, inftead of^7d, he makes ufe of sjd — o*1?
192692194This had its origin from Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, defcen- gg^^ 0
192692194This in¬ formation we received from Mr Brown, boatfwain of the Royal William during the war 1758,& c. Why then do we tar cordage?
192692194This may perhaps give the mathematicians fome help in afeertaining the law?
192692194This queftion, therefore, What is the procefs of nature, and w''hat are the fupplies which fill our fprings?
192692194Thus, after a long feries of confu- fion and difafter, there afeended the Ruffian throne-a 3 A 2 new*?
192692194Thus, of the equation 3*-}-5r= i4, the root or value of a?
192692194Upon a contell between, them and a company of cooks and vintners, about a piece of public ground, which the one claimed as?.
192692194What could Racine do?
192692194What fhall de honed; man do in my clofet?
192692194What fixed points can we find with which to conned the middle of the tie- beam?
192692194What is the caufe of all this?
192692194What is the conie- quence of this?
192692194What need you tell me that?
192692194What ’s he?
192692194When the executioners began to prepare for their fatal errand, he expollulated with them, demanding what crime he had committed?
192692194When thus corrected, it would become V= d—0.1)-)• mg sj y''S — L y''S But as the term-hVs- ri.6 nA?
192692194Whence then has Row^e his reputation?
192692194Whereupon Protogenes with a fierce look, aiked how one who was fuch an enemy to the emperor could be fuch a friend to him?
192692194Who can pretend to fay what is the velocity of a river of which you tell him the breadth, the depth, and the declivity?
192692194Why, after having( hone in all the energy of fentiment, does he on a fudden turn unaffefting?
192692194With this view?
192692194Work performed p mnr- x n?
192692194\v hat is the diftance to which the fwell extends, and what increafe does it produce in the depth at different diftances from the weir?
192692194^ Trajan died in the 63d year of his age, after a reign He die?, of nineteen years fix months and fifteen days.
192692194about-/?.
192692194and prepare for the prefs Sir Robert Sibbald ’s Introducho ad hjjoriam rerum a Roman is gepa- rum in ea Borealis Britannic?
192692194and what will be its velocity?
192692194are equal by iuppoii- JPr JP?
192692194cept jerufaiern?
192692194he difperfed them through ‘ u ° u''“ 3a different 2 57 H O M C 187] ROM 110111?.
192692194how much its waters will be raifed by turning another llream into it, or funk by ta¬ king off a branch to drive a mill?
192692194how, my Lord?
192692194lie very fteady, and need no''attendance, becaufe the ma-?
192692194pSr «?
192692194reft on the props E and G, and be loaded at its middle point C with a weight W. It is required to determine the ftruin at the feftion CD?
192692194the Baltic^* A fajine tne-Qaltic?
192692194tion only from the Hope its furface, and the modifi- Theory, cations of this motion or its velocity only from the width and depth of the ilream?
192692194was legitimate?
192692194what, affront my wit?
192692194° We mull content ourfelves with merely pointing out thefe tracks of invefligation to the curious reader?
192692191( E)H~7ly,0 gravepropofitum?
1926921911 ms iantti fied tour, or round by the fouth, is called from deas or deft, “ the right hand, ” and foil or>4 t fun- ” the right hand bein?
1926921914CO, COO fouls?
1926921915?.
192692191?
192692191?, s d °^ded into Upper and Lower Deptford, and has two parifti churches.
192692191?.
192692191A wit being afked one day what could be done to keep up an opera threatened with a mod complete damnation?
192692191Afk the faithful youth Why the cold urn of her, whom long he lov’d, So often fills his arm?
192692191Among the evils to which mankind have been fubjeaed, why might not their being liable to demoniacal pofTeffion be one?
192692191And is not this ftrong and exqmfite ienhbihty intended by my Maker to urge me on to aftive and immediate affiftance?
192692191Another queftion which naturally occurs on the fubjedl of the deluge is, Whether there was any rain before it or not?
192692191Are then the latter to be told that dancing is an imitative art?
192692191At the fight of another ’s woe, does not my bofom naturally feel pain?
192692191But as tms phrafe regards the internal qualities rather J DIG than the external figure, it is improper j and ought Didlionar?
192692191But do not the moft poliflied natures feel a fimilar, a kindred pleafure, in the deep wrought diftreffes of the well imagined fcene?
192692191But how many lliades may ferve to embel- hih thofe pictures?
192692191But what are thefe rules?
192692191By what miracle was the little ark preferved amidft the tumult of thofe impetuous waves which muft have ruflred in from all quarters?
192692191CYC This is a valuable tree to the inhabitants of India, as Cyca?
192692191Can this be delufion?
192692191Could a ftroke from an angry woman tinge the honour of a gallant foldier?
192692191DETERIORAI ION, the impairing or rendering any thing worfe; it is juft the reverfe of melioration?
192692191DEW[ i?
192692191DIKE, a ditch or drain, made for the paffage of waters. — I he word feems formed from the verb to dii?
192692191Do not( fays he) thofe mountains of Armenia bear witnefs to the^truth?
192692191Dr Bulching a- firms, that it appears from ancient records, as early as, 1?
192692191FORM.yaZy?.
192692191Have they any foundation in nature, or are they merely arbitrary?
192692191He fays, “ the firfl inhabitants of the ifland of Crete were the Daftyli Id?i, dence on Mount Ida: that feme faid they were a Z? ° A.
192692191He ordered Muftapha to affemble^rh0, IS^ 011 ’ ’ The lultan, after a gloomy filence, formed tired to Irene ’s apartment KWr hlf 7?
192692191He will( ay to himfelf, lam w- ai?
192692191Her majefty afked what die was?
192692191Heretics were alio punllhed m ‘''’ dEOENERATION?
192692191Horace fays, Hellade percujfa, Marius cum prscipitat fe, Cerrilus fuit?
192692191However, as the eyes in fome meafure ferve them for cars they may underftand what is faid by the motion ° f the bps tongue,&?.
192692191I*,], r t rms or legs j but from the parts that are “ telain’in^plainl?
192692191If delufion, how or for what purpofes is it produced?
192692191If this be true where is the woman that would not facrifice fuch a lover to her refentment?''
192692191If, inftead of a feal, you look at a piece of money thefe alterations will no?
192692191Ih.n arrived at Delos,,?
192692191In the year 1773?
192692191In? fLI<^UIUM( fr ° m deliquefco, “ to be diffolved ”) ChemiJIry, ls the diffolution or melting of a fait by impending it in a moift cellar.
192692191It fhoold ftand f ° ur( hor(?
192692191It was not held poflible to celebrate any?
192692191M. Linguet afterwards propofed this queftion, What do you underf.andby metaphyjicalideas?
192692191My tigure IfuCy td; cud Uhould oppeor hut.11 «--- pafsemv"t!me m my ftudv, either in reading what may?
192692191N. Lat, v DiEnBIlUIZi?
192692191O deemed thou indeed No kind endearment here, by nature given, To mutual terror, and compaflion ’s tears?
192692191On the laft day of March 1686, they took their departure from Cape Corrientes, and on the? zd day reached Guam, one ot the Ladrone Hands.
192692191Or why dreams he at all?
192692191Originally it is faid to have been?
192692191Profeffor Bay- P"1?
192692191Purple blue T 2r 5* 7?
192692191Required the fun''s altitude?
192692191So often draws His lonely footfteps, at the filent hour, To pay the mournful tribute of his tears?
192692191Such a code of rigorous law ’s gave occafion to a certain Athenian to alk of the legiflator, why he was fo fevere in his punifhments?
192692191The Hof¬ pital for Lunatics in Weft Bow lane, founded by Dean Swift, and opened in 175?
192692191The Romans, generally fpeaking, rec¬ koned two clafles of the gods, the dti majorum gen¬ tium, or dit coifente?, and the dii minorum gentium.
192692191The cavalry is upon the fame footing-, each regiment con¬ fiding of 17 officers, including ferjeants and corporals and C6?
192692191The defignation of fuch an eftate is made by the tenants, butments, and bounding?.
192692191The laudable and humane example of the Dutch was followed in the year 176!?
192692191The marquis, however, took care to fupply this defea, by leaving a garnion of 1? co of the belt men be bad with him.
192692191The ufual operations are roafting, bailing, and fiew-^n,?
192692191The word is derived from the french drille,''^DRI MbrS*;“a^genus^olf plants changed by Murray, in the 14th edit, of; 5jy?.
192692191Their houfes and little village?
192692191To male an ereEl dialy declining from the fouth to-? i;nin.r wards the eaf or wejl.
192692191We mud enced by the date of the body?
192692191Were not theie the murmurs of a heart ill at eafe?
192692191What are thefe Kobaler, who were de- and Buthos, the abyfs, are of the fame purport?
192692191What metamorphofe ftrange is this I prove?
192692191What parts of a human being are adhve, what dor¬ mant, when he dreams?
192692191What( hall I do to be for ever known, And make the age to come my own?
192692191When furnifh- ed with a ftand, it has alfo a fpirit- level; and the ftand ha?
192692191Whence arifes then fuch a number of inhabitants with¬ in fo fmall a fpace?
192692191Where was his gallantry on this occafion?
192692191Who is a flranger to the ftory of Lucretia killing herfelf for her violated challity?
192692191Whom can we fuppofe lohi, with the head of a ferpent, to have been, but the great founder of all kingdoms, the father of man¬ kind?
192692191Why does not he always dream while afleep?
192692191^ creeping things and fowls, if they were not all de- ftroved?
192692191^DERBv''ihfcapital of a county of the fame name •?
192692191^uid primum, quid deinde, quidpojlremo alloquar?
192692191__?
192692191and why does not common fait, or faltpetre, or vitriol, do the like, but for wrant of fuch an attradlion?
192692191and would there not have been on this fuppofition a iulh- cient reafon to preferve living creatures m the ark lor future propagation? ”& c. 33.
192692191beftow fo many farm carelfes Todve Vnew?
192692191f./Ce/ S e/ cufrtirt''/cfrt?
192692191fays, “ Can the Cufhaean, or Ethiopian, change his colour? ” In Ezekiel( xxix.
192692191for 1705; from whence it was co¬ pied and reprinted in the ABa Fruditorum t?0?
192692191g. Whence then is the origin of this art?
192692191how oppofite the lights?
192692191how varied may be the Itrokes of the pencil?
192692191like reference to the patriarch; in the 6ooth year, theuS( the ak?
192692191on account of the didurb- the hor^^ ArCrh.bi{boP Becket a»d other zealots of Ir J?
192692191r Afi-? n Ppvfia faid DERBEND, a ftrong town of Afia, in Pei, it are uic, r jt feated near the<-ai- pian''foa.
192692191r t?
192692191r? E^FNESS, t^le^ate a perfon who wants the lenfe ot hearing j or the difeafe of the ear, which pre¬ vents its due reception of founds.
192692191ra duty, but a childifh and womanifh weaknefs; and I muft congratulate deformed perfons, who, by ex- ample, plain perfon of very mean’afpea?
192692191vii Part ”?
192692191well, the Englifti ufurper, interpofed: and Tredenc de¬ fended his capital with great magnanimity till the 17 rvf T?
192692191{ land has rsj?
192692191» PPe- s, that the-tents, d, t evaggerate when they commended it as a wonde''?
192692191“ If( fays Mr Walpole) thefe indances are proble¬ matic, are the following fo?
192692191“ what harm can there be to join in the public feftivals?
193109111T'', La, fl. Ir ’? 193109111 ''y/ X 1 lir, 5,, „ i''-.5 l^fi r 4? §* ’-ry: j;,i;''-\ r- •,. 193109111 ( a Roman general), was for his valour and virtues chofen emperor by the army in the reign of Maximinus, A. D. 237? 193109111 .1 I GE O L O G V''7/ P/-* » M!»;:iti 1 mSX;3 » ■>: i2!Hi;wS''MiSS?! 193109111 //-f? 193109111 A. M. at Edin¬ burgh; In what places is it noon? 193109111 Again, becaule 4Q-£^4? 193109111 Another queftion concerning the glaciers naturally occurs, namely, Whether they are to be confidered as in a ftate of increafe or diminution? 193109111 Any time this month you may tranfjilant evergreen£veJ ° j? 193109111 Arch- biihop Tennifon dying in 1715? 193109111 At Edinburgh, on the 23th of December, in the forenoon, when the fun ’s altitude is f 20'', requir¬ ed the hour and the fun ’s azimuth? 193109111 At no period has its furfac 0th August 1801. 193109111 Mr|j Playfair''3 Jamefon obferved the Riefengebirge, which, feparates Pluf rationst Silefia from Bohemia, to be for 150 miles compofed of?'' 193109111 Of Her- “ Herman in his geology, publifhed in 17875? • 90, man. 193109111 Of quadrilateral figures, ayywcn? 193109111 Oii what days is the fun vertical at St He- 525 lena, m latitude 130 S.? 193109111 On the 1 ft of Auguft at Edinburgh, it being 35 minutes paft four, P. M. it is required to find where the fun is vertical? 193109111 On the weft fide of the towrn is a noble though ancient feat 5 F 2 GOG[? 8o] G O L fjoditow of die ear! 193109111 On what day does^Algenib, the firft ftar or Perfeus, come to the meridian at midnight? 193109111 Or even if they could be fufed, how is it poffible that the carbonic acid of the limeftone fliould not have been diflipated by fo ftrong a heat? 193109111 Part II,? 193109111 Principles Reftify the globe for the declination, bring the gi- an that feveral of them have been. 193109111 Suppofe an obferver at the Cape of Good Hope, on the 21 ft of June at midnight j required the al¬ titude and azimuth of Artturus to him? 193109111 Suppofe it to be at prefent 9 A. M. at Lift)on, what time of the day is it at Pekin in China? 193109111 The fun ’s meridian altitude obferved at a cer¬ tain place on 5th Auguft is 740 24''N. What is the la¬ titude of the place? 193109111 The general council or affembly of the people is compofed of the citizens and burghers of the town} their number in general amounting t ® 15^ °? 193109111 The right afcenfion of a certain ftar is 162 IS''and its declination is 570 27''N. 5 What is the name of the ftar? 193109111 The two fides AC, AH, of the triangle ACH are equal to the two Tides AC, CD, of the triangle ACD •, a, nd.t!le,? 193109111 The working fumace? 193109111 This code, printed by the Ead India Company in 1776? 193109111 To the regret and difappointment of the miner, they have been frequently intercepted and^ of?, “ e entirely cut oft by the horizontal ftrata. 193109111 To what places is the fun vertical on the 16th of May and 29th of July? 193109111 V''-netian brown, with gold fpangles, commonly called? 193109111 Vega and Atair were obferved to have the fame azimuth at London on the nth of May j required the hour of the night? 193109111 What is the fun ’s place on the 4th of June? 193109111 What is the latitude and longitude of Capel- la? 193109111 What is the latitude and longitude oi Arctu- rus? 193109111 What is the nature of that mixture which gives birth to thefe eruptions, that produce lava and throw up mountains? 193109111 What is the right afcenfion and declination of the ftar Sirius? 193109111 What people are the antceci to the inhabi¬ tants of Quebec in North America? 193109111 What will be the altitude and azimuth of Cor Hydrse on the 21 ft of December at London, at 4 o’clock A. M.? 193109111 What will be the fun ’s altitude at 10 o’clock A. M. on the 30th of November at Edinburgh? 193109111 When does he difappear, and how long is he entirely abfent during the longed: night? 193109111 When it is 3 P. M. at Edinburgh, what hour is it at Delhi in Hindooftan? 193109111 When it is noon at London, what hour is it in the Society ifles? 193109111 Where are fituated the perioeci of Newcaftle upon Tyne? 193109111 Where are the antaci to the Cape of Good Hope? 193109111 Where, therefore, was all this water to be found? 193109111 above the horizon at North Cape in Lapland, the lati¬ tude of which is''jz ® N.? 193109111 and 4* 29''E. Long, from Greenwich? 193109111 and lord chancellor of England, born at Bury St Ed-? 193109111 and which Dr Lifter Go(,[l]iani affures us was only the volatile fpirit of raw filk reCti- defter? 193109111 country? 193109111 ic? 193109111 in boards} or, in Numbers, price 3b iSi THE FARMER ’S MAGAZINE: A PERIODICAL WORK, EXCLUSIVELY DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE Ss? 193109111 ir(? 193109111 is the content in ale gallons? 193109111 j(J9 t? 193109111 k In what places is the fun vertical at the fum¬ mer iolftice? 193109111 r 689]( 5 E R may enter into alliances, and purfue by all political GewKsny? 193109111 stid became the wifi? 193109111 their? r1e/ ent iclining or oblique pofition, by the finking or falling of the cliff.
193109111“ Do you imagine( fays Cicero), that Pacuvius wrote in cold blood?
193109111“ Required the fituation of the ftars for the lati¬ tude of Newcaftle, on Odlober 6th, at eight o’clock in the evening?
193109111“ to th?
1925477761602 Decimal arithmetic?
1925477761737?
19254777621 I?
19254777627 ° 58 8?
19254777630?
1925477765?.
19254777681. tK Mxyvna- ia?, and 106. ic8.
192547776And do we for that rejeCt their authority?
192547776And does not one inllantly percieve what relpeft and dependence this privilege would draw upon them?
192547776And fuppofing it had been feen by fome ancient, whofe writings ftill remain, why fhould he make particular mention of it?
192547776And it is evident alfo, that this aug¬ mentation of induftry will not eflentially increafe num¬ bers: Why?
192547776And what are the Grecian Bacchus, Hercules, and Thefeus, but knights- errant, the exaft counterparts of Sir Launce- lot and Amadis de Gaul?
192547776Animal a tethys?
192547776Animal afcidia?
192547776Animal tethys?
192547776Animal?
192547776Becher, tfi?
192547776But whence had they the fpicery?
192547776But who imagines that Paufanias had either opportunity or in¬ clination to copy Paterculus?
192547776But who would conclude from this anfwer, that Gronovius thought the Alexiades fpurious, or not worthy of any regard?
192547776COL[ 2?
192547776Can competition among buyers poffibly take place, when the provifion made is more than fufficient to fupply the quantity demanded?
192547776Can not the true God be fuppofed to have performed thofe miracles which Pagan hiftorians have attributed to their falfe divinities?
192547776Could it have been intended to confide in their difere- tion?
192547776Did he, who thus infcrib’d the wall, Not read, or not believe, St Paul, Who fays there is, where’er it( lands, Another houfe not made with hands?
192547776Do men never prefer cumbrous ipler.dor to cheapnefs and convenience?
192547776For what are Homer ’s Lseftrigons and Cy¬ clops, but bands of lawlefs favages, with each of them a giant of enormous fize at their head?
192547776For what is death to that mind which confiders eternity as the career of its exifterice?
192547776Hath Bolingbroke depos’d Thine intelleft?
192547776Hath he been in thy heart?
192547776Hence the whole circumference of the fhell is divided into 3 equal part?.
192547776Her bed is India, there( he lies a pearl''?
192547776How difficult is it to afeertain the years of the fudges of the Jewifh nation, in the Bible?
192547776How inconceivably nume¬ rous then muft the circulations in the whole human body be?
192547776I therefore alked him how he ventured into fuch fubtleties which I ne¬ ver durft meddle with?
192547776I2;?
192547776IS NOTHING CERTAIN?
192547776If thefe things are lo; il njan is the veffel of guilt and the victim of mifery j he demands how this conftitution of things can be accounted for?
192547776In Englifh, who is furprifed to find has and hath, a hand and an hand, a vfeful and an ufe~ fid, in the wTorks of the lame author?
192547776In this bufinefs two quedions naturally arofe:—Fird, Whether the king had a right to fend his troops to any part of his dominions?
192547776In this cafe, how could they propa-* gate their religion?
192547776Is the language of every nation intuitive, or were they dictated by exi¬ gences, and eftablifhed by convention?
192547776It feems?
192547776It is even fo foolilh as to infinuate, that the duke ’?
192547776It is recommended, therefore, to all who wilh to enjoy their exiftence( and who entertains not that wifti?)
192547776Lord Karnes afks, Wherefore are not the Abyflinians and the inhabitants of Zaara of as dark a complexion as the Moors on the coaft of Guinea?
192547776M hv.n G I G Cicliorium?.n important public objea roufed his mind, and de- Cicuta.
192547776M. Animal an afcidia?
192547776Mr Delaval has ren- How aihe?
192547776Muft we pay no regard to the writings of Livy, becaufe his hiftory contains many fabulous rela¬ tions?
192547776N. Animal?
192547776Nay, we may even alk, How could they live?
192547776Neverthelefs, if there be fuch a thing as an argument a priori, why may not fpecula- tive men be employed in its examination?
192547776O thou fond many 1 with what loud applaufe* Didft thou beat heav’n with blefling Bolingbroke Before he was what thou would’ft have him be?
192547776Of the nine authors named in p. 109, had any one ever vifited Paros?
192547776On the other hand, can competition take place among the fellers, when the quantity demanded exceeds the total provifion made for it?
192547776Or how came Arabia to be fo famous in ancient times for fpices?
192547776Or whence proceeded that miftake of many great authors of antiquity, that fpices aftually grew there?
192547776Or, may we gather from thefe words, That houfe is not a houfe of lords?
192547776Pythagoras is thought to be the author or firft infti¬ tutor of this kind of life; his_ difciples?
192547776Sup- “ pofe the queftion to be Is nothing certain?
192547776Suppofe the queftion to be, What is each Bri- “/o/ P- r boaft?
192547776That Sir Thomas knew nothing of it, or be¬ lieved it to be fpurious, or forged it, or was privy to the forgery?
192547776The Sun in 30 ® 1!g; Jupiter in 2 ° 3; —?
192547776The lunifolar year was aboutt, on, of?
192547776The motion of the head Chryfall?.
192547776The true queilion is, H. s not the Parian Chronicle every mark of antiquity that can he expell¬ ed in a monument claiming the age of 2000 years?
192547776The? Toors in the northern parts of Africa.
192547776There Colour- makin?.
192547776They.obeyed his orders with joy, and he called his fubje&s/>£>/?
192547776This is a new phenomenon: here the fall of price?
192547776To put the finilhing hand to the company, in I71?
192547776To wThat a degree muft good- breeding adorn the beauty of truth, when it can thus foften the deformity of falfehood?
192547776To which, in iilaftration, are prefixed, 1 Curfory Remark?, 2.
192547776Trade is at a{ land: what then becomes of all the hands which were form¬ erly employed in fupplying the foreign demands?
192547776Vt ho does not feel how much more vocal and fonorous the fifth appears when compared with the fourth?
192547776W as it probable that the court of diredlors wmuld aft upon that leak?
192547776Was David, wras Solomon, a ftranger to this doftrine?
192547776What Creffid is, what Pandar, and what we?
192547776What a number of difcordant opinions has Mr R. himfelf given us from the ancients concerning the age of Homer?
192547776What are the firft confequences of this revolution?
192547776What are the frowns of for¬ tune to him who claims an eternal world as his inhe¬ ritance?
192547776What darknefs is fpread over the fucceflion of the- kings of Judah and Ifrael?
192547776What then are the confequences of this new com¬ merce to our merchants, who have left their homes in queft of gain abroad?
192547776What, indeed, is life or its enjoyments without fettled principles, laudable purpofes, mental exertions, and internal comfort?
192547776What, is my Richard both in fhape and mind Transform’d and weak?
192547776Where ’s the neceflity of that, Mr Bayes?
192547776Who can doubt, for example, of the truth of the faas, re¬ lated by Admiral Anfon, in the hiftory of his voyage round the world?
192547776Why is a period fo vaft obliterated fo entirely as to efcape the retrofpeCt of hiftory, or tradition, and even of fable itfelf?
192547776Would it be contend¬ ed that parliament meant to leave the finances in the hands of the company, wFo had been declared unfit to be truded with them?
192547776_^ “ We muft not( fay?
192547776and, fecondly, If he fent them to India, who ought to defray the expence?
192547776board?.
192547776by the bill, what fecurity could other trading companies have that they fliould not be treated in the fame manner?
192547776c o Number?.
192547776called a partnerfhip} the term company, being COM[ 234]/;ompan^ bein?
192547776clcro, 2?
192547776how can it be fuppofed, that a being fo wicked and unhappy fhould be the production of an infinitely per¬ fect Creator?
192547776how far they extended?
192547776in board?.
192547776increafed their number to forty 5 and King Jame?
192547776is it becaufe I look like a man? ” But though fine ridiculed the manners of the French court,( he was very felicitous to enter into its intrigues.
192547776looking on them with contempt y by appearing unma?
192547776nay, what fecurity could there be for Magna Charta itfelf?
192547776or is it the found<< of days that are no more?
192547776terior to himfelf?
192547776| j?.
192547776§> uid ef quare ego fervi mei hilarius refponfum, et conturnaciorem vultum, jlagel- lis et compedibus expiem?
192547776’ 5 If again you interrogate them how thofe books,-phe nature which they call Scripture, are authenticated?
192547776“ But what reafon could there be for thefe archaifms in the Parian Chronicle?
192547776“ Did not Offian hear a voice?
192547776“ There is nothing faid of it in Sir T. Roe ’s negociations. ” What is the in¬ ference?
192547776■^?
192545783( e) From ymiov, mentum, “ the chin. ”( f) From xeg*?, cornu, and lingua, “ the tongue. ” 2 Ckap.
192545783(?)
192545783* 2?
192545783*, ficknefs, continued to defend themfelves until they''v1 ™"Were furioufly affaulted in the laft hold which was left them?
192545783-^•CK''AA../# 4^Vf^^''AAV/ M> AJ?
1925457831 5 5 4 5 1: 1.05: 1.1025 1.157625: 1.21550625?
1925457831 he Engliffi fort is built on the foundation Anam^lecr?
19254578322(?
19254578327 ° ANA''Brain"i\d*^ne nerves, like the blood veiTels, in their courfe Nerve?!
1925457833l
192545783443 The kai- In the nice bee, what fenfe fo fubtly true, From poifonous herbs extrabls the healing dew?
19254578345?
19254578348 not delfitute of beard, 49 form and afpedl of, contrafted with other nations,? o Vol.
1925457836 11 7 8 9 11 10 11 11 9 10 8 10 12 11 13 12 13 10 10 20 W 12 10 11 12 J4 10 10 10 13 10 13* 3 7 12 14 14 10?
192545783: Required the annuity or rent?
192545783; What rate cf intereft has the purchafer for liis money?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783?
192545783? e.fe ob;efVat.
192545783?"
192545783A gentleman gives 40 years purchafe for an eftate: What intereft has he for his money?
192545783AMRAPHEL, the king of Shinar, or Babylonia, »!?]
192545783ANCYLOGLOSSUM,( from atyxvAe?, crooked, and yXas- irx, the tongue); a contraftion of the ligaments of the tongue.
192545783Aptera — ‘?& the fcorpion, fpider,& c. have no wings.
192545783Are thefe fecretions to be imputed to any particular difpofition in the fluids, or is their caufe to be looked for in the folids?
192545783As there is no other way of croflin?
192545783Between the New World and the Old, there are fe- able preva- yeral very ftriking differences; but the moft remarkable cold?
192545783Bio?.)
192545783Bucolicce vei eclogc?, lib.
192545783But if I go into a white man ’s houfe at Albany, and alk for vittuals and drink, they fay, Where is your money?
192545783But it may be afked, Why eels and vrater fnakes are capable of living longer in the air than the other kinds of fifh?
192545783But though this\laft pile was 157 years in building, John Knox, in June^-59?
192545783But would not ignorance or fuperftition afcribe to a fupernatural me- tamorphofis thefe temporary expedients to deceive the brute creation?
192545783Can we ferioufly refledl upon this awful fub- jefly without being almod lod in adoration?
192545783Druidae libilis i d dicunt in lublime jadlari,,, “ fagoque oportere intercipi, ne tellurem attingat?
192545783Even in the moft fultry weather the moment that the wind veers to that quarter, its pe?
192545783Few ma¬ riners, though acquainted with?
192545783Ho ho, dit el/ e, ef ce vous?
192545783How they fpend their time?
192545783How^ the ribs are elevated in oppofition to their own natural fituation?
192545783Howr is this provided* for?
192545783I he anatomifts of this century have improved ana- tomy?
192545783In 1
192545783In addition to all her ac¬ quired accompliftiments,{ be pofleffed the greatert per- Annei A\TNTT?
192545783In this cafe, wrould not the inflammable air( he alks), by diflblving our food, facilitate its converflon into chyle?
192545783It comes from the pre- poiition which in compolition ffgnifies repetition or duplication, and ro«o?, tj''vry.
192545783It is ftill a matter of controverfy, Whether the mar¬ row is fenfible or not?
192545783It may be afked, however, Why the uvula is want¬ ing here, and not in naan?
192545783It often happens, too, that they only recolledl the moft diftant of thefe princes in whofe time certain circumftances had happened?
192545783It was alked of an In-^iuns''dian, who appeared to be extremely old, what age he wTas of?
192545783J r,0.1?
192545783Might not numbers of fpecies have found a convenient abode in the vaft Alps of Afia, inftead of wandering to the Cordilleras of Chili?
192545783Modern anatomifts have difeover- iWvvraa.ny miitakes the ancients were led into, by their JEU’Ty I?
192545783Moravian?.
192545783No wonder it had been fo long concealed; for who would have thought of looking for the fummum bonum, where others have placed the fum of mifery?
192545783Qu''efl devenu cet efprit f fubtil?
192545783Secondly, They fupply the place rlie dia- of a mxxlcxxl''Av diaphragm and ftrong abdominal mufcles?
192545783Some fuppofe the word AptpiKUon?
192545783The faid prelate propofes it as a qutftion, Whether fuffering eternal torments be a greater tvil than not ex- ifting?
192545783The firft, Are you guilty of this fa&?
192545783The heart has been defcribed as contracting itfelf, T?
192545783The king propofed aloud this queftion, Whether he might not take his fubjefts money when he needed it, without all this formality of parliament?
192545783The length of poun?
192545783The money they earn is their own, but they mull pay for their board and their proportion of 47?
192545783The next queftion, then, which prefents itfelf is, From what part of the old world America has mod probably been peopled?
192545783The queen, nowr perceiving the Y y 2 danger A N G Angola, 3?
192545783The third Who were your accomplices?
192545783Thefe he fo much dreaded on account of theiron tfieTor''valour and policy, that he immediately declared war?
192545783They interrogate them, with loud lamentable cries, W hat they are doing?
192545783Thole of the joints are called TOM"?.
192545783Three miles below7 this city, the Delaware receives the river Schuylkill, which is navigable about 8?
192545783Thus the bellow''s performing their funclions conftantly without the leaft hilling, or other noife?
192545783Thus, if it be demanded, what chance a perfon of 40 years has to live feven years longer?
192545783To find the value of an annuity upon the longeft of two lives?
192545783TrXeirov oiMbeats Trignc*?
192545783Two veffels were finiftied j and, under the command?
192545783Txam?.
192545783WWAM1 ‘ A,1S 18 years of age> B 34, and C C6- U hat is the value of the longeft of thefe three lives mtereft at 4 per cent?
192545783What are its lizards, either in fize or intrepidity, compared with our crocodiles?
192545783What are the horfe and the ox, the largeft of its animals, compared with our elephants, our rhinocerofes, our fea horfes, and our camels?
192545783What bet¬ ter can an animal do for its welfare?
192545783What follows?
192545783What is to defend us againft fo enormous, fo unlimited a power?
192545783What it is they want?
192545783Whence then the degeneracy of all men into the favage ftate?
192545783Where they are unit¬ ed to each other, they rife up into a fpine on theii?
192545783Who has ever feen in America butterflies fo large as thofe of Bourbon, Ter- nate, the Philippine ifles, and all the Indian Archipe¬ lago?
192545783Who is there to mourn for Logan?
192545783Why fuch a com¬ plication of nice and tender machinery?
192545783Why then does every individual of mankind conclude that his neighbour has the fame fenfations with himfelf?
192545783Why then fhould we conclude otherwife with regard to the eel while in its natural ftate, than that it is a little fiflt?
192545783Why was there not rather a more fimple, lefs delicate, and lefs expenfive frame( a)?
192545783\.rf,, 5- ■*:''?
192545783^&chA^ v^T''-t\.A nA^>''i-''f~-,-’u- •>, i^s[<->''v,?
192545783a- pound? ” “ No( fays he), I can not give fo much, I can not give more thmi 3s.
192545783amp.. A. gentleman is willing to purchafe an eftate, provided he can have percent, for his money: How many years purchafe may he offer?
192545783and why the diaphragm is contradled downwards towards the abdomen?
192545783compound intereft?
192545783for his money; Required the rent?
192545783its wolves, its bears, the moft dreadful of its wild beafts, when befide our lions and tygers?
192545783lor inftance, if in a found animal the vis nerve a alone produces the contraction of the mufcles, we will a(k what purpofe the vis infita ferves?
192545783ment.s,- c.^] lajrs>} jjie t}le nails?
192545783nature feem capable of, the feeing and com¬ prehending the whole plan of the Creator,"in forming the univerfe, and in direfting all.its operations?
192545783on all the payments then in arrear?
192545783or 0fpcer?
192545783to continue 4 years, but not to com- p 8 mence till three years hence, difcounting at s. per cent.?
192545783® etWCen the tW ° 0ri8in. S? fthIs inufcl
192545783® etWCen the tW ° 0ri8in. S? fthIs inufcl
192545783“ But why fhould we enumerate our injuries in de¬ tail?
192545783“ Laftly, Thefe jointed coralloid bodies, which? » Ir Needham calls chaplets, and pearl necklaces, I have feen Animsf- frequently very diftin&ly.
192545783“ Sec?.
192545783“ Set?.
192545783■ Sy c^.. riate xxvni •/?
191253838(? a.
191253838- Did he travel with his wives as the patriarchs did with their flocks and herds?
191253838/3< e?, T « Ti^TTVCy CiTT^& C. What is life and all its pride, If love and pleafure be denied?
191253838/3< e?, T « Ti^TTVCy CiTT^& C. What is life and all its pride, If love and pleafure be denied?
1912538381 he word comes from the Greek “ one who governs alone j ” formed of[ tove?.
19125383819 That thefe philofophers have not a juft view of hu- Defeats ant?
19125383820?
191253838239 Metallic Ore?.
19125383824?
1912538382dly, If this be anfwered in the affirmative, by what means is this fomewhat furnilhed?
1912538383?
19125383855- 71.1?
191253838595* Chaux F/ uatee, Hauy?
1912538387, lenfes, which are ufually of 1, lx?
1912538387/ h?
19125383876 M I D W/?, g. The iliac folTae.
191253838
191253838?
191253838? 5I- Exter.
191253838An eft fadta conceptione ilia antra nafeuntur?
191253838And which way can the value of that be de¬ termined?
191253838As he increafes in years, his foot, inches?
191253838At H there is a brafs plate, the back part of which is fixed to the hollow tube//, in which there is a fpiral wire, which keeps the plat?
191253838But here it may be afleed, Why( hould the money- jobber melt down the filver coin?
191253838But is not a compaft or promife binding, till men have agreed that they lhall be binding?
191253838But it deferves to be inquired, Whether thefe fupernumerary fingers are real fingers?
191253838But ivas not this univerfally acknowledged before the abbe was born?
191253838But others objedf, Why are not thefe birds caught in fuch frefh waters as are conti¬ nually haraffed by nets?
191253838But to what do his celebrated experiments amount?
191253838But w’hat is the reafon that the diamond alone poffeffes this pro¬ perty?
191253838By what means then is this furniffied?
191253838Cal¬ chas firft alked his antagonift, how many figs a neigh¬ bouring tree bore?
191253838Char. — This mineral is found rnailive and in great abundance; ha?
191253838Char.—Entirely volatilized before the blow¬ pipe, without leaving any refiduum, and without decom?
191253838Conjlituent Part?.
191253838Do determine they remain vifible the whole year?
191253838Do not we highly approve the man who fulfils them, even though they fhould prove to be again ft his intereft?
191253838Do they ever appear while a ftrong north wind blows, or do they only come in great numbers with a fouth wind?
191253838Does not this virtually determine the value of fuch currency with regard to all the currencies in Europe?
191253838EfFed?
191253838Figs- 57?
191253838Have butter milk, fummer fruits of the moft acefcent kind, lemon or orange juice, always this effed in adults by their admixture with bile?
191253838Here oc¬ curs a queftion: Does the great quantity of paper money in England tend to diminifh the value of the pound fterling?
191253838How much mifchief then may the rafh interference of an ignorant operator produce?
191253838I hey mel?
191253838I o w’hat then ftiould we attribute it?
191253838I^a Poix Mineral?
191253838Ihould we not fufpeCt the reafoner of knavery, or of very weak affeCtions to virtue?
191253838In other characters it referable?
191253838Is it only for bodily exercifes, or for moral, political, and religious ones?
191253838Is nature fullen and penurious?
191253838Is this the utmoft extent of her Butler ’s plot, where ftie winds up the drama, and difmiffes the, adlor into eternal oblivion?
191253838It is faid, Why do not rapacious fifh, and aquatic qua¬ drupeds and birds, devour thefe fwallows?
191253838It is feated in a fertile country, 25 miles north- eafl of Orenfa, and?
191253838It may be afked what became of this group of wives?
191253838It may be afked, bow, at this rate, any filver has remained in England?
191253838It may be demanded, What hurt this trade can do to Britain, fince thore who export filver bring back the fame value in gold?
191253838It may be inquired in this place, how far the coining tne pound troy into 65( hillings is contrary to the laws of England?
191253838It was addreffed to a daughter of the famous Stephen Duck; and be¬ gins with the following ftanza: Would you think it, my Duck?
191253838M I N E R fe^ cube?, ov with truncated edges or angles •, double four- fided pyramids; Ample and acute tlrree- fided pyra¬ mids.
191253838MINAGNGHINIM, a pulfative infhument of mafic, among the Hebrews, which was a fquare table of wood, fitted with?
191253838MORAL PH ° f M?"
191253838Malformation of the external parts in fome cafes does re?
191253838May we not, therefore, from analogy reafonably infer, that women fometimes exceed the more ordinary period?
191253838Moft refinous gums were original!)?
191253838Mopfus now to try his adverfary, a(ked him how many young ones a certain pregnant fow would bring forth?
191253838Now what provilion has the Author of our nature made for this neceditous''condition?
191253838OJ i3 m. 5''O OO''J OSCn 40 Co d O o co d o& P.^ O 2?
191253838Oxide of copper Arfenic acid Water Lofs 39 43 i?
191253838P/71''7 C( 7* 1*/?. — — tacles operees par Lintercc{jion de M. Pans,< b''c.
191253838S?
191253838Some fay that it migrates to comes of a warrner climate; fome, that it retires to hollow trees winter?
191253838Specie?.
191253838Srro c.^ rs g O, a, ’ o^ O ►-d d 2- S^^ S co? • o.
191253838That fuch an ornament of the mind, and fuch ahowcon- condudl of its powers and paffions, will ftand the tefttormal?
191253838The Iris.—The Perfian iris is done by putting, loz the infide leaver a lay of white?
191253838The lunula, with lunular molecules, is a final?
191253838The names and tranf- aflions of hi?
191253838There W''ere befides the monks of St Bafil( called in the Eaft Calogeri, fromxaAs?
191253838This holds true in a higher degree in the cafe ofpY''b?
191253838This learned au¬ thor computes, that the Mifchna was compofed about y ° uT- rf, ° f ° Ur L ° rd; hut Dr Lightfoot fays, r Jud?n cotnPlled th?
191253838To what conduCt are we obliged?
191253838What effeft has it upon the current value of a p*und fterling?
191253838What is the confequence of this?
191253838What is the confequence of this?
191253838What then ffiould hinder him from a£Hng thus?
191253838What then is the confequence of all this diforder?
191253838What- on?
191253838Who are paid in fuch pounds?
191253838Who would have thought that fnails and polypes might be diflefted, and could repro¬ duce the parts fevered from their bodies, if it was not a fadil?
191253838Why does that organ gene¬ rally aCt at a certain period, after having remained in a quiefeent Hate for fo long a time?
191253838Why, it has been fometimes alked, are not miracles wrought in all ages and countries?
191253838\Vhy ftrould four milk, granting its exiftence, give rife to thtm in infants and not in adults?
191253838^L''''Y Silica Magnefia Alumina Lime 41 Oxide of iron 15.02 Fluoric acid?
191253838^_ It is evident, therefore, that thofe two claffes of Contralto?
191253838_ The anterior part of the 12th ring has only one gaf- tnc mufcle, marked
191253838a Piftole a Spstnilh Piftole ° tV CrV o?
191253838anc ‘ caverns?
191253838and do not we condemn him as a knave who violates them on that account?
191253838and his affections that he had received fuch and fuch do&rines from God be as fully credited, as if it related to the molt common occurrence?
191253838and howr eagerly do they ftill grafp at new difeoveries, without any fatisfadlion or limit to their ambition?
191253838and would not this be a violent and an arbitrary revolution in the value of the money unit, and a raifing of the ftandard?
191253838and, zd/ y, What evidence have we that there will be a future ftate of retribution and of ever- lafting happinefs?
191253838can he not buy gold with it as well without melting it down?
191253838ceed?
191253838d?
191253838how has he fitted the after, man, for playing his part in this perplexed and bufy fcene?
191253838i?
191253838or are they only binding, becaufe it is our intereft to be bound by them, or to fulfil them?
191253838or what fenfe can he have of moral obliga¬ tion to promote it?
191253838or, does Part I the God of nature envy the happinefs of his off- Of Moral fpring?
191253838or, if they difap- d1''5 pear, at what feafon does this happen, and when do they appear again?
191253838p W-•^ D 3 O Q-^?=''£-^ s"^??
191253838p W-•^ D 3 O Q-^?=''£-^ s"^??
191253838p W-•^ D 3 O Q-^?=''£-^ s"^??
191253838ror?, one of which is plane, the other concave.
191253838tion to the man ’s veracity be removed by this miracle?
191253838w 3 f?
191253838what duty does nature didtate and require in fuch a cafe?
191253838where was he to get the money? ” would have been his exclamation.
191253838worjhip of the? nind, that which is in fpirit and in truth; we( hall conclude the feftion with a fliort ac¬ count of that which is External.
191253838yellow or brown; •-?
191253838“ Natural hiftory( fays he), as|?
193109110( fays the king:) Do you not know the order? ” The cap¬ tain fell on his knees and alked pardon, but did not at¬ tempt to make any excufe.
193109110, 1, jj''The coronation of Bonaparte took place m the month orgnatioiv of December 1804, which was accompanied on the part0f? ona.
193109110//,,//• j,•// 4*/s'',"//en''?//
193109110//,,//• j,•// 4*/s'',"//en''?//
193109110//,///??.
193109110//,///??.
19310911022?
1931091102?
1931091103?
1931091104?
1931091104?
1931091105] FUR air coming into contaft with water, that, although the Far temperature of the atmofphere is 60, 65?
193109110
193109110A letter of Choifeul- Gouffier, ambalfador at Con- ftantinople, verifies the fa£t.—What have you to an¬ fwer? ” Louis.
193109110A new fubject wras therefore fallen upon, which was the queftion, how the dethroned king was to be difpofed of?
193109110A?
193109110About ■ ne year 1697?
193109110Am I confcious of none but generous worthy fentiments, and none but upright ho¬ ned intentions?
193109110Am I to lludy the interelt of my friend in preference to my own?
193109110And indeed how can it be otherwife?
193109110Are we authorized to conclude this, becaufe we do net find muffirooms where we have found them a year before?
193109110As lykeways all kynd of prat- ■ tiques, freitix, or uther Ljh extraordinair actions, quilh can not abyde the trew twiche of naturall?''aifon.
193109110At the very time, however, that Louis was o 3 FRA in the callle of Peronne, the people of Liege revolted, Frnm?.
193109110But an important queltion Hill remains to be conlidered: how far is an union oj interejis to take place between friends?
193109110But can putrefadlion Create an organic fubftance?
193109110But it may be alked, how far the confidence of friendlhip ought to be car¬ ried?
193109110But remains there no¬ thing more for you to eft''eCt?
193109110But why ffiould friendlhip be recommended by means different from thofe which the gofpel employs for the purpofe?
193109110But, after all, what are thofe parts in the fungi cafually obferved by naturalifts, and which they have taken for the parts of fru&ification?
193109110By fiich a formidable competitor the tween the dauphin was reduced almoft to the laff extremity, when fndPkh?
193109110Do you think any perfon ought to be harmed in his body, name, or goods, for mere Ipeculative opinions, or his external wray of worfhip?
193109110F O W[ 5? ibove 800I.
193109110FOR^Forts^ t?
193109110For where fhall we find, in any other part of the world, an ex¬ ample of volcanoes ejecting lava in the form of walls enclofing a regular area?
193109110Foreigners?
193109110Franc?
193109110GAL[ 3 ther?.
193109110GAM[ 3 A and B play at fxngle quoits, and A is the heft garaefter, fo that he can give B 2 in 3: What is the ratio of their chances at a fmgle throw?
193109110Have all the monks and anchorites of the Ro- m...'': church been holy as the founders of their orders?
193109110Having forced open the db> rs, the foremoff of the af- faffins rufhed into his apartmtnt • and one of them afk- ed if he was Coligni?
193109110He Tf th?
193109110He alio dug in an orchard, near a wall, about a week after- warks, and found the froft to have Pf? rated, tofth^ depth of 14 inches.
193109110I 80 3 ° 50 5 5 190 31 53? 5 Great.
193109110I his declare brought fonvard the conditutional quedion, “ Who peace and ought to poffefs the power of declaring peace and war?
193109110I??
193109110I??
193109110If that benevolence which the gofpel enjoins admit of any modifications, why not of that particular modification which conltitutes private friendlhip?
193109110In IJ1?
193109110In that lovalifts in uarter 0f the country the language of the reft.of France La Vendee.?
193109110In the evening he allied what o’clock it was?
193109110In the progrefs of this great inquiry, is it not poflible that the prefent expenfive exertions may in part be fuperfeded?
193109110In this cafe, the metal( hot into fine needle- like crydals, articulated, or joined to each other, as in the Arbor Diana?.
193109110Is it neceffafy for him to receive ftill more fubftantial afliftance?
193109110Is there an admirer of Homer who can read his defeription without rapture?
193109110It was alked, whether France would be willing to fend minifters toa congrefs to negotiate peace with his Britannic majefty and his allies?
193109110L With refpedt to the firft?
193109110Laftly, wdrether France would deftre to communicate any other mode of accomplifhing a peace?
193109110Letters from St Leon and others evince the reality of thefe deeds.—What have you to an¬ fwer? ” Louis.
193109110May I lawfully injure others, in order to ferve him?
193109110Methods of preparing frogs for experi¬ ment?.
193109110Mud I communicate to one friend the fecrets which have been intruded to me by another?
193109110Mull not your connexion with fuch a per¬ fon be favourable to your virtue, your interell:, and your happinefs?
193109110Mult I reveal to my friend all my fentiments, opinions, and defigns?
193109110On the 26th of December i/97?
193109110Orleans — Loiret?
193109110Sdkace?
193109110Shall pofterity reproach US with having found a Capua in Lombardy?
193109110Since, however, from the imperfection of our fenfes, we are unable to perceive thefe feeds, ought we to infer that they do not exift?
193109110TJ?
193109110The French call it? alere- by reafon, they fay, that the top of the malt is ufually cut m the form of a hat, which the Italians call gal era.
193109110The duke if Guife and the chevalier growing impatient below fUrs?
193109110The game law ’s, which condemned the law?,&.c.
193109110The prince indignantly alked him, if he was to be involved in the fame deftru&ion?
193109110The receipts of Gilles, who was ordered to raife a com-''pany of 60 men, fliall be prefented to you.—What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110The regifters of Septeuil ftrew what immenfe firms have been made ufe of in tbefe liberticide ma--wiceuvres.—What have you to anfwer?
193109110The total mafs of the active population of the kingdom is divided into 249 parts?
193109110The tradition of Si- aZin^111?
193109110The youth of Vienna were requefted to grant their afliftance, when 6000 of them volunteered their fervici~?
193109110This faft is proved by the treaiurer France, of the civil lift.—What have you to anfwer? ” • v Louis.
193109110This fa£l is proved by the letter of Toulou- geon, governor of Franche Comte.—What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110Tim times mu g cn''illiarde or rather Italian •, and li- word is French, gai?
193109110To them he propofed the great queftion, Whether he was bound to perform the* treaty of Madrid?
193109110Upon the reftoration, he recovered his prebend in the cathedral of Salifbury, was appointed.. chaplain extraordinary to his majelty, and created?
193109110Water is fo univerfally and fo defervedly admired in a profpedt, that the naoft obvious thought in the management 0?
193109110Were all the difciples of Zeno Catos or Epicle- tuf s?
193109110What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110What is the confequence?
193109110What is this but to command us to enter into habits of intimacy wherever there is ground for mutual efteem?
193109110When the ambafladors de-''!! Verf?''
193109110When your friend needs your diredlion and advice, freely and honeftly give it: does he need more than advice •, your adlive exertions in his behalf?
193109110Whether, by coating the blood- veffels inftead of the nerves, any motion through their medium could be ex¬ cited?
193109110With much indignation, howrever, he de- 23] 4 FRA manded why the committee had publidied it without, the permiffion of the Affembly or the king?
193109110^ The young king was not endowed with any of thofe Louis VI?.
193109110^\¥hen Sir Ralph Abercromby died, General Hut- Rofetta,.ml on succeeded to the command of the Britifli forces Ciliro> an
193109110againft the French; but he was ac-? Ies.and cufed of difaffedion to the republic, a charge which^ could fcarcely fail to be true.
193109110as; n otper cafe^?
193109110fage to China?
193109110ibid?
193109110or what ftiould hinder its becoming uriiverfal, if it be innocent or allowable in him?
193109110or who does not form to his imagination a feene of de¬ lights more pifturefque than the landfcapes of Tinian or Juan Fernandez?
193109110or, Whether if he did not perform it, he wras obliged in honour to return to Spain?
193109110the Papacy j the empip"° f Germany j France; Spain*, Flungary-, Great Bri*^11} Bohemia5 Lombardy j Polandj Sweden-, Denman?
193109110the gods ordain’d To grace Alcinous and his happy land?
193109110where are you going, king?
193109110~ rV of a grave, or de- cig?
193109110— What have you to anfwer? ” Loins.
193109110— What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110‘ L. S. Xavier and ‘ Charles Philippe. ’ “ What have you to anfwer? ” Louis.
193109110“ But I pray you forget not likew^ays to tell what are the Devill ’s rudiments?
193109110“ Do you acknowledge this lift of fums paid to Gilles? ” Louis.
193109110“ Do you flncerely declare that you love mankind in general, of what profeflion or religion foever?
193109110“ Do you know this writing? ” Louis.
193109110“ Do you not acknowlege your writ¬ ing and your fignet? ” Louis.
193109110“ George Gfooljantzjr, a Pglander?
193109110“ Louis, where had you depofited thofe pie¬ ces which you own? ” Louis.
193109110“ The que- ftions are done with. ”( To Louis) — “ Louis, is there any thing that you wiffi to add? ” Louis.
193109110“ What are you doing there?
193109110“ What became of the oxygen gas ufually produced in thefe experiments?
193109110“ Who are they that prefented you with thofe projects? ” Louis.
193109110“ Who are thofe to whom you gave money? ” Louis.
193109110“ Why did you affix a veto on the decree which ordained the formation of a camp of 20,000 men? ” Louis.
193109110“ Why did you fummon the mayor of Paris in the night between the 9th and 10th of Auguft to the caftle? ” Louis.
193109110“ Your marginal comments? ” Louis.
192692195-S? 192692195 # Bf/ hop Newcome''''? 192692195 * 3732? 192692195 * devotion, and his reverence for the Supreme Being, founded on the befl: and mod philofophical principles? 192692195 - Is it not deftruftion to the wdeked, And banifliment from their country to the doers of ini¬ quity? 192692195 0f money? 192692195 1 hefe ten times have ye loaded me with reproaches, Are ye not adiamed that ye are fo obdinate againfl me? 192692195 264 In the mean time, David having railed a powerful David in¬ army, prepared to take a fevere revenge of the Englifh, il, n?
1926921955 6.3 Many more inftances might be pointed out, in which ihs beat?
19269219553>} 5> 2S> 26, 27, 28, 36, 37, 42, 43, 44, 49, 50, 60, 64, 69, 73, 75, 77, 80, 84, 86, 88, 89, 90, 92?
19269219559?
1926921956 Mountain?
19269219565?
1926921957 6 5 3 7 5 4 6 9 7 3 3 5 5 4 79 Parifli. ’S 107 67 54 37 123 79 6?
19269219593?
19269219594?
19269219595?
19269219599?
192692195?
192692195?
192692195?
192692195? 5 William I. engages in a war with Henry II.
192692195? 5< S Writes an offenflve letter to the queen- tegent.
192692195? wrafs; that the Scots made a way over it with brufhwood, removing it as they went along, that the Englifh might not puiiue them by the fame way.
192692195A parliament was called in 1523, in which it was debated, Whether peace or war with England fhould be refolved_ on?
192692195A. hundred of his relations offered to be- 5& come Sr?
192692195AMUSEMENT,?
192692195According Scoto Iri^1 to thefe laws, the fucceflion both of the kings and chief- 4 E z\ taiqs?
192692195According to For-''''11* 1?
192692195Achw.u.vftuvr •* Yor/ iapo/''S Aba li S y K^v^/T fh''ianb/ iut J0aimd*y/ T £ a*n/ oj~\^ ».r( uAs''lXMgrui 4?''
192692195And numbereth he not all my fteps?
192692195And to bring the wandering poor into thy houfe?
192692195And wilt thou bring me even into judgement w- ith thee?
192692195At the centre?
192692195Barbour, a Scots hiftorian, relates, that there was a morafs in the rear of the Scottifh camp, which he calls the two-7Jiile?
192692195Bid he really live and write at fo early a period as Porphyry and Philo pre¬ tend?
192692195Both the earls were now proclaimed traitors, and yora- but Hume was allowed fifteen days to furrender him- l?!
192692195But how came Cecrops to have any connexion with Cyprus?
192692195But if fuch xvas the origin of w7eeks, how came the great and ancient goddefs Tellus to be omitted?
192692195But remark the third: Shall not the mailer of words be anfwered?
192692195But what is the objefl of this war, as unjuft as it is unnatural?
192692195But what is this to the purpofe?
192692195But, in regard that the Scots plenipotentiaries had no inftrudions concerning hoftage?.
192692195Chrid allowed not any fuperiority among Sc(Tar
192692195Conftantine was in the utmoft danger Is utterly of being killed or taken prifoner, but was refeued by^e^eate^ h?
192692195Did not he wdio formed me in the belly form him, And did not one fafhion us in the womb f?
192692195Do you fpeak of one and the fame per- on, you will aik?
192692195Does it become a fovereign, to make loyalty a crime?
192692195Doth he not fee my ways?
192692195Edward Bruce and Douglas entered England on the eaftern fide, ravaged 1 s c o Northumberland, and laid the bifliopric of Durham un- SectlarrJ?
192692195For example, fuppofe the queftion to be, Is it proper for me to marry?
192692195From what caufes did the council of England fufpend the jud ven¬ geance of the laws, and leave their queen ’s life dill in jeopardy?
192692195He affirmed, that the term bifhop was nowhere to be found in it in the fenfe in which it was commonly un- derdood, a?
192692195He died on ihe ipth November 1649, ai; a£e 74?
192692195His fentiments were received with approbation; and though the archbidiop of Glafgow?
192692195His warmth of temper was exalperated by fome lively criticifnjs which had been made on his for¬ mer produftions, and h?
192692195How long diall the words of thy mouth be as a mighty wind$?
192692195How long will ye vex my foul, And tire me with vain harangues?
192692195How unfuitable then would panegyric be, where the fiibject was full of humility?
192692195Hume eafily found means to gain over this near relation to his own party j^ j?
192692195Hy?.
192692195I afked Idris if ever he had before ieen fuch a fight?
192692195I47?
192692195I4^?
192692195I? et.
192692195If a Chinefe is alked how he finds himfelf in health?
192692195If you praife them, they anfiver, How fall/ dare to perfuade my felf of what you fay of me?
192692195In 1379?
192692195In fhort, he confidered both them andv — Learmouth, who was ordered to attend him, as fo many 49?
192692195In this, however, he failed; and as 56,000 pounds of David ’s ranfom Rill 2?
192692195Indignation is, however, inflantly predominant: But a few words wdro can forbear?
192692195Is fuch then the faff which I choofe?
192692195Is it not to di&ribute thy bread to the hungry?
192692195Is it, that he ihould bow down his head like a bulrufh, And fpread fackcloth and athes for Ids couch?
192692195Is not this the fall that I choofe?
192692195Is the vermin become thy couch, and the earthworm thy covering?
192692195Is then thy pride brought down to the grave; the found of thy fprightly inftruments?
192692195It is not I fup- pofe to excite the ftrongeft averfion for the Ruffian name?
192692195It was moved, whether bidrops, as condituted in Scotland, had any authority for their functions from the Scriptures?
192692195J46?
192692195Malpedir, thane of Mearns, fur- prifed Duncan in the caftle of Monteith, and killed 97?
192692195No quality or rank fliould e?
192692195On the 2 2d of Odfober, 1589?
192692195On this occafion many of the moft illuftrious perfonages in the kingdom were arrefted: the duke of Albany, his „ 31?
192692195On what were its foundations fixed?
192692195Or lhall a man be acquitted for his fine fpeeches?
192692195Or who dretched out the line upon it?
192692195Or who laid the corner- done thereof?
192692195Protedations were made before the lords of the articles, as well as before the three edate?, to interrupt and defeat tranfadlions which 3 T Scotland.
192692195S G O[ 747 1 confeiTeci that he had been guilty of the king ’s murder, matter?
192692195SCO[ di?]
192692195SCR[ Or rr.y maid, when they had a controverfy with me, What then ihould I do when God arifeth, And when he viiiteth, what anfvver could I make him?
192692195Say, who fixed the proportions of it, for furely thou knowed?
192692195Scriboniu?
192692195Setlptur?.
192692195Shall this be called a faff, And a day acceptable to Jehovah?
192692195Shall thou even feoff, and there be no one to make thee alhamed*?
192692195Shall thy prevarications make men filent?
192692195Stirling • but he was aftonilhed, when he was not onlyfemb''e?
192692195T he faloon is a ftate- room much ufed in the palaces Salfette* n?
192692195TABLE II.<~-This Table confifts of Frigorific Mixtures, corapofed of ice, with chemical falls and acid*?.
192692195That a man Ihould afflift his foul for a day?
192692195That made the world like a defert, that deftroyed the cities?
192692195That never difmified his captives to their own home?
192692195The Scots had fo long confidered their monarch?
192692195The fecond dames forth at once: How long wilt thou tride in this manner?
192692195The following fublime defeription of the creation is XXX1X* admirable: Where rvad thou wrhen I laid the foundations of the earth?
192692195The following is a fummary view of the number of cha- rity- fchools in Great Britain and Ireland, according to the beft information at prefent?
192692195The maxim, ‘ Pafcitur in vivis livorpqft fata quiefcit?
192692195The notary demanded what dowry he would give her?
192692195The onlv entrance into the Krimea by land is over a bridge, and through an arched Hone gate?
192692195The?!
192692195Thefe are feventeen, n, 31, 34?
192692195Thefe were chiefly compofed by the defendants of Afaph and Korah: they are 10, 12, 13, J4?
192692195Thefe?.re, 122, 61, 63, 124, 23,87, 85, 46, 47, 48, from 9610 117 inclufive, 126, 133 to 137 inclufive, 149,- M0?
192692195Thefe?.re, 122, 61, 63, 124, 23,87, 85, 46, 47, 48, from 9610 117 inclufive, 126, 133 to 137 inclufive, 149,- M0?
192692195Then finding that thefe profligate wretches, whofe number increafed every day, fometimes efcaped punifhment by the favour of the prefldent or judges?
192692195Then the crier proclaimed with a loud voice, merate every city, or every province, where thefe dire Who is here?
192692195This is a model of irregular fortification, which, together with the walls of the deep ditch, is r u s[ 421] n u s RufTi?.
192692195Thorchill alked him, what he thought of death?
192692195Thus the ftiips c and a?
192692195Tlie French The death of the queen- dowager, at a peiiod fo crili- troops fub- cai?
192692195To ffew the different fpace through which the power 5 ° and refjiance? nove in different circumjlances.
192692195Two apartments^4?
192692195Was he of the very remote antiquity which his, tranflator claims for him?
192692195Was it on purpofe to procure more confpira¬ tors, and involve others in the crime?
192692195What can be more horrid to the imagination, than to fuppofe a father leading the deared of all his Tons to luch an infernal flume?
192692195What could be the reafons for fuch a conduft?
192692195What fliall I fay more?
192692195What is this but an open violation of juftice?
192692195What things then were they of wftiich Abel had heard, for which he hoped, and in the faith of w’hich he offered facrifice?
192692195What was the value of the reward?
192692195When thou feell the naked, that than clothe him; And that thou hide not thyfelf from thine own^flefh?
192692195Whence is this moifture derived?
192692195Whether is it imbibed from the atmofphere, or does it flow from the foil through the roots?
192692195Why will ye be my perfecutors as well as God, And therefore will ye not be fatisfied with my fltfli X?
192692195Would the Jews have fuffered in thefe employments perfons that rejected the greatefl: part of their Scriptures?
192692195YVas there in reality fuch a writer?- 2.
192692195^x, 6?.
192692195art thou made like unto us?
192692195fhrint?
192692195i?
192692195iliand, which had been peopled by the fubjedts of Scot- The parties were all remark- 4S2 Death of her buf- band.. 48.-?
192692195j- j?.
192692195on II,/ Amusements of S CIE X C?!
192692195or ought the near¬ er in one degree, iffuing from the fecond filter, to ex¬ clude the more remote in one degree iffuing from the eldctl filler?
192692195page 88 268 280? i6 348 Part II.
192692195pale, and in extreme agitation, inquired how it was with rain, iliai?
192692195sdr The earl of Morton, the abbot of Dunfermline, and The regent Mr James Macgill, had been appointed by the regent? 1: c!
192692195sec t?
192692195x;r?, a fcreen, 74 inches high by 44, covered with white paper on that fide next the mirror.
192692195‘^.5* O''-''/v j 3/ 1 uuu- ble the product of the wheels, and 6x6x6=216, the product of the pinions, confequently^-2—2^ 5?
192692195“ And, with rtfpedl to the laws and ufages of the go¬ vernment of Scotland, it is ordained, that the cuftom of the Scots a?
192692195“ When you fay all tilings are incomprehenfible( fays he), do you com¬ prehend or conceive that they are thus incomprehen¬ fible, or do you not?
192692195“ Whence then( fays his Lordfhip) the degeneracy of all men into the favage ftate?
192692195■*?
192545784Why did they omit this ancient account of their lian early ages? 192545784 ( Gen. Bio? 192545784 * IT z/ €? 192545784 *''ree ’ an(* enj ° ys? 192545784 *// frt/ r? 192545784 , piaJn? 192545784 ,^''
192545784ARMENIAN, fomething belonging to or produced iir Armenia: thus we fay, Armenian boh?, Armenian/tone,& c. See Bole, and Armenus Lapis.
192545784ARTOBRIGA, a town of Vindelicia( Ptolemy): Now?
192545784After which it is to be demand¬ ed of him, whether he be guilty of the crime whereof he ftands indidled, or not guilty?
192545784And, after all, what was the fage advice that required fuch a preface?
192545784Arch, in Compofition, fignifies chief, or of the>7?
192545784Archytas, what avails thy nice furvey Of ocean ’s countlefs fands, of earth, and fea?
192545784Are not the component parts of the human body near¬ ly hmnar to thole of the brute creation?
192545784Armenia is faid to have been very early advanced to In6 r ° n?Ur ° f a kl?
192545784Arnaud d’Andilly, Robert, tfrfc fon of a cele¬ brated advocate of the parliament of Paris,-was born in 1588?
192545784At any rate, was Dicmedes fo little known, as to make it proper to fufpend the aftion at io critical a junfture, for a genealogical hiftory?
192545784Being aiked, what things were mofl proper for children to be inftruiEled in?
192545784Being brought before the governor, he alked him why he committed fuch ravages and depredations in the Chri- ftian territories?
192545784But the Chriftian officer not lowing infcription upon it in white letters: “ There only killed this youth, but Uy?
192545784But, fays this acute and learned critic, what fcheme does our chronologer purfue on this occafion?
192545784But, our author alks, lor whom could the chronicle of Paros be intended?
192545784Does he mention Archilochus, who was honoured by his countrymen, and diftinguiftied as a poet in a general aflembly of the Greeks?
192545784Does he mention any of the battles, fieges, and treaties of the Parians?
192545784Does he record the events and revolutions of his own coun¬ try?
192545784Even in the weft, however, the mountains 1J?
192545784Ex> xi?
192545784Examen modefti libelli Gulielmi Perkinfi de prsede- ftinationis modo et ordine, itemque de amplitudine gratiae divina?.
192545784He dwelt on the names and the achievements of the Bruti, the Gracchi, and the Sci- pios; and of thefe men, faid he, are you not the chil¬ dren?
192545784He faid, ‘ that he did not obferve any remarkable alteration Whether he recollefled how the current fet?
192545784His fon Phoroneus inftituted the laws of government; and, on that account, has been called the frf king in Argos, theyfry?
192545784Horace mentions this fa£l in hi(s third fatire of the fecond book: ■-5W//Jitnile ifti Greecus Ariflippus?
192545784How much fhould each have?
192545784I ft. Intereft on 34675k for 17 days, at 5 percent?
192545784II APORON, or Aporime, a problem difficult to re-, AP ° ftai)''-i folve?
192545784Ibis 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?
192545784If 100 men make 3 miles of road in 27 days, in how many days will 150 men make 5 miles?
192545784If 36 yards coft 42 fhillings, what will 27 coft?
192545784If, adds he, it was eredled at Paros, tvhy does he not mention more archons of that city than one?
192545784In the 48th year of the Hegira, the caliph fent his fon Ir?)
192545784In the celeftial theme, this is alfo called theyf/ y?
192545784In the firft, the fuppofition is, that 30 horfes plough 12 acres, and the demand, houo many 42 will plough?
192545784In this fenfe, the word is derived from the Greek virtue, and A«yo?, difeourfe.
192545784It is fufficient to render the nation de¬ cidedly fuperior to their rude neighbours of Tartary • and as Chmefe improvement can never advance far?
192545784Lo?.
192545784Mufic is a ftcience that is held in no ftmall degree of Mufic?
192545784N. Lat u?
192545784Now Orcn?
192545784Of us of mo¬ dern times what ftiall we fay?
192545784Or that of Artaxerxes Mnemon, when reduced to hunger by the lofs of his baggage: How much pleafure have I hither¬ to lived a f ranger to?
192545784Or why{ hould a few unequal matches be reckoned among the caufes of bringing upon the world an univerfal deftrmriion?
192545784Plow endlefs are conjedlures?
192545784Required the greateft number which mea¬ fures 475 and 589?
192545784Required the intereft and balance due on the nth November 1775?
192545784S?
192545784Sea Apr, a name given by Steller to a marine ani¬ mal which he faw on the coaft of America, and is thus 77//?.
192545784See Ammoniac, ChemistRy^Wa?.
192545784Sending therefore for fome of the principal of them, he alked them what kind of treatment they expefted from him, nowr he had con¬ quered them?
192545784The French their/
192545784The apccdeutcc in every thing pre- 453 1 A F A of ferred the modern writers to the ancient, to fuperfede Apagog?
192545784The difficulty arifes chiefly from the variety of denominators j for when numbers are divided into different kinds of parts?
192545784The fourth day they called tin fin?.
192545784The good principle they named Ye%ad or ITefdan, and Ormond or Hormi%- da, which the Greeks wrote Oromafdes; and the evil demon t?
192545784The potter, in a pi¬ tiful tone, a Iking what he meant by wronging a poor man than had never injured him?
192545784The time when Antipas died is- not known: however, it is certain Antipa?.
192545784The word ctrcx^iov is uled by Suidas indifferently with e/ SeAe?
192545784The word is Latin, armijlitium; and compounded of arma, arms, ” and/ A?
192545784The word is compounded of « priv, and proffo?, ajfe&ion.
192545784Thefe words at the beginning, to?
192545784Thus 4 — • 142857? — aand tV~027.=-^-V 4=.
192545784Thus it may be alk¬ ed, how often 8 is contained in 19?
192545784Thus, i —.11 z 1= 552 Jr=.222 J- or J-= z 66(i J- or J-~.333: J= 77^ 4=-44* 4= 88?
192545784Thus, it may be afked, if 18 men con- fume 6 bolls corn in 28 days, how much will 24 men confume in 56 days?
192545784To make the firft a diftinguifhing mark, without regard • to the other?
192545784To one who alked him what his fon would be the better for being a fcholar?
192545784To what then are thofe antipathies, of which we have heard fo much, reducible?
192545784We inveigh againft the manners of antiquity j we ftudy vice alone j and vice is ART Where nowr is the art of reafoning?
192545784What is the value of 1773 yards, at 3d.?
192545784What is the value of.425 of L.i?
192545784What 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?
192545784What occafion was there for keeping iheep, when none of them could be eaten?
192545784What reafon could there be, he afks, for introducing thefe into the Parian chronL cle?
192545784What would the fum then have been, had we carried on the computation for doo years more, according to the Septuaglnt?
192545784Where aftronomy?
192545784Where could fhe find fo many wet nurfes for them?
192545784Where is the right path of wif- dom?
192545784Who in reply alked him, How he came to have fo lit¬ tle?
192545784Why did they not copy his molt memo- 1 table epochas?
192545784Why did they not produce his autho¬ rity r1 or at lead, why did they not mention his opi¬ nion?
192545784Will any one pretend to call by the name of an¬ tipathy, thofe real, innate, and incontellable averfions wffiich prevail between fheep and wolves?
192545784alfo abound? md occupy the forefts in great numbers.
192545784any of their poets, patriots, or warriors?
192545784any of their public inrtitu- tions?
192545784cier teiis us?
192545784dfiid faifo infontem tonitru Salmonea miror?
192545784he was admitted into the town, and received with great ox- 1''? out this time alio Knaled advanced wdth a bo- kindnefs.
192545784p, 389,& c?
192545784per boll?
192545784per ftone, how many will be i8)444(8 2d, If a certain number of men confume 8 bolls in 28 days, how many will they confume in 56 days?
192545784pointed for their firft food, the milk in her brealts?
192545784the curvatures of its direftion through that u-—\ mountainous country?
192545784to a decimal of a ton?
192545784what will 7 yards coft, at the fame rate?
192545784wherein he tells them, that ibme of their own poets have laid, T tv yut?
192545784whether he was father of the handfome young wife of fuch a one, whom he named?
192545784world to do for herfelfj her hufband, and her children, what belongs to women to do?
192545784yy=6^ 17)112(64$ 102 5 1 48 To 3 4 1 TT 7 5 3 5 TV 1 5 7 64 TT?
192545784« CASE?
192545784» Te maris et tern?
192545784— Plutarch( Zh?
192545784—-5 — 1 —?
192545784‘ He believed to the W''eft Whether the water was fait?
192545784“ But( our author adds) what{ hall Eve do with fix infants in fix years?
192545784“ Do you make a wonder( faid Apuleius, in his defence) that a woman Ihould marry again, after ha¬ ving lived a widow 13 years?
192545784“ Extend them as “ dire&ed for addition, and borrow at the right- hand “ place, if neceflary, by 9. ”.93566.646.735$.738?!
192545784“ I afked, whether he obferved any regular ebb or flow of the tide?
193108317''Surens?!
193108317), we muft take other fituations E, F, of the particle B, and draw E
193108317, P cl/^n Vf f,^''->e''-•< a- C) ’( jy f- J///^o,
193108317, P cl/^n Vf f,^''->e''-•< a- C) ’( jy f- J///^o,
193108317, Sugar is foluble in water, and in a nnall degree in al¬ cohol?
193108317-* — y — J( a) It was at this place, in the year I772?
193108317/ c^.-fxi —''“''1 o-- £ d ’/ y. i „ r-*n< r''y?- J- M 1^.
193108317100 grain?
193108317106?
193108317144 The citizens of Ghent, alarmed at the approach ° fSeverity o?
19310831725 25 25 25 25 2?
19310831725 grains of fpirit tc 100 grain?
19310831726 26 25 25 26 26 26 26 26 Line?
19310831732"40 50 60 70 80 90 ICO 110 I 20 130 I40 150 160 170 l8o J90 200 210?
1931083173N''Thu| S O I?
19310831790 grams of ipirit to s too grain?
193108317< f Is Heaven unkind to man and man alone?
193108317?
193108317?
193108317?
193108317? ea/ ing- 0r annealing It foftens the metal again, and renders it fufceptible of another drawing without the rilk of cracking in the operation.
193108317A pin? r which goes through the plug- beam catches hold of m Vol.
193108317After regulating this partition, the conquerors contracted with their new fub- jefts fome reciprocal engag?
193108317And I faid, Who art thou, Lord?
193108317And laftly, does it not prove, that a mere glance of his eye is fuffi¬ cient to make his impreffions as lively as durable?
193108317And when we were all fallen to the earth, I heard a voice fpeaking unto me, and faying in tae Hebrew tongue, Saul, Saul, why perfecuteft thou me?
193108317As this river generally runs upon plain ground, it roll?
193108317But fuppofe it were podible, for what purpofe drould they return?
193108317But how is this to be proved?
193108317But is not this eafily explained by a common procefs, the for¬ mation of flalaftites?
193108317But what is fmelling?
193108317But why do I talk of dazzling or blazing?
193108317But why fiiould they fhun the light of the fun?
193108317But why ftiould a grave ferious ghofl appear at midnight?
193108317But why ftiould apparitions fhun men of underftanding and learn¬ ing?
193108317Does it not prove that the lame lively imagination is the caufe of the moft lingular aftions of this lleep- walker?
193108317During his refidence in that city, his hoilefs, who was a Lutheran, aiked him one day if( he could he faved while Ihe continued in her re¬ ligion?
193108317Every one, it is prefumed, will allow this to be perfedfly le¬ gible in long- hand, then why may it not in ftenogra- phy?
193108317Foot II74 1187 I 200 X 2 I 2 12 24 1236 1248 1259 I 270 I 28l 1293 1305 JS1?
193108317From what then does this heat originate, and whence is the fuel which has produced it for fo many ages?
193108317Having given thefe proofs of public virtue botli in a military? nd civil capacity, he wilhed to do ftill more for his country.
193108317Having here found an ample field for?
193108317He died on the lyd1?
193108317He has not time to?
193108317How far this fup- pofition is corredt, it is irnpoftible for us at this time to determine; but it is rendered probable by the adlive me?
193108317How is this to be difcharged? — This is the office of the pumps ST and XY.
193108317However, there is no indance of their fit?
193108317If the and Scripture, N ° Stop?
193108317In thefe the ulual quef¬ tion is, how many gallons of alcohol is there in a calk, or fome number of gallons of fpirit?
193108317Is it not that which( lands aiotie, which has the caufe of its exiftence within itfelf?
193108317Is it poffible for a fen¬ fation to exiff: where there is no fentient?
193108317It is alfo marked with a fingle knot in the middle of each interval, as at 25, 35?
193108317It is an important queilion, Whether this diminution goes on continually, till the fluid denfity of the fait is the fame with its foiid den- fity?
193108317It is n?
193108317It may be objefled, Are they not all miniftering fpirits, fent forth to minifler for them who ftrall be heirs of falvation*?
193108317It will now be alked, what( hall be fubftituted in place of this erroneous theory?
193108317Let M be the quantity of furface of the exterior circle,? n that of the inner circle, and p. that of the ring.
193108317Let? n be the bulk of a pound of fpirit of any given temperature, the bulk of a pound of water of the fame temperature being accounted i.
193108317Might it not deliver its meffage with as much eafe and more fuccefs in the day- time?
193108317Now if A difputes the fact of the vacancy, then that clerk who is kept out of the profits of th?
193108317Now if the could not fpeak till David addreffed her, why might flie not have applied this oratorial me¬ dicine the firff time flie appeared to him?
193108317Now what are thefe hut brines, of which we have not been able to get the laline ingredient in a feparate form?
193108317Now what is this?
193108317O 4 8 12 l6 20 24 28 32 40 5 ° Co Ob?
193108317One of their honours this night fpoke, and, in the name of God, ajked what it was, and why it dijhirhed them fo?
193108317Ptolemy Hepheftion mentions f a gygonian c- 6? ’... ftone near the ocean, which wras agitated when ftruck by ■ i Lib.
193108317S M O[ 4 Sffiok?.
193108317S T R r?
193108317Shall we be told, that the fpeftre has the power of becoming vifible to fome, and of remaining inviiible to others?
193108317Should it now be afked, why then is the bilhop of Man ftill called the bifhop of Sodor and Man?
193108317Some line, fuch as dn A will limit all thefe ordi¬ nate?,.
193108317Spain'': I he principal capes and promontories of the Spaniftr^?
193108317Strength of bendin*?
193108317T V ’ r*< L/> •r?
193108317The Grecians called them TrtT^xi ccp&^oo- ixi, ftetra?
193108317The Por- tuguefe, the Venetians, and the Spaniards, have already fallen j and what is the prefent ftate of our neighbours the French?
193108317The advantages of thefe beads are, that being made of a fubftance which is little acted on by chemic?.!
193108317The fubfequent additions are 604.7?
193108317The point at which the inftrument floats in pure water fliould be mar¬ ked 1000, and thofe above it 999> 99^ ’ 991 ■> i an^ thole j?
193108317The whole will of God is revealed to us in the Scriptures; what further ule for the vifible interpofition of angels?
193108317Then alwfjh?
193108317Therefore the fedion BCDA is lefs than the feOion BcDr?, whofe four fides are equal.
193108317Therefore, when the pifton defeends again by the condenfation of the fleam in the cylinder, a pin marked is?
193108317This is called*?
193108317This is wffiat is called in I ranee a IVias i/ i das?
193108317This muft be the cafe where the texture is^onor*''6''perfefUy uniform, as? ve have reafon to think it is in ftrengt^ glafs and the ductile metals.
193108317This we have remarked upon in the article Roofs, with refped to a trufs by Mr Price( fee Roofs, N ° 40, 41* 45)- Now wlieJ?
193108317Thus the 111:60. weight neceffary for breaking the 7-foot bar is This added to 1245, and the fum multiplied.y 7, gives, 8963?
193108317V?, Metals.
193108317We may therefore confide in the propriety of the formula?/—•—.
193108317What ftrength will refult from a mixture of two compounds of known ftrength, or mixing any compound with water?
193108317What is every year of a wife man ’s life but a cenfure or critic on the paft?
193108317What is fmell in the rofe?
193108317What is the form of the curve correfponding to the fmalleft diflance of the particles?
193108317What is the proper fignifi- cation of a fubftance?
193108317What is to be underftood, in philofophical ffridtnefs, by the per¬ fume* of the defert?
193108317When the fugar is completely cryftalli- where the zed, the linen is taken away from the apertures in the 5 ™?
193108317Why ftiould learning be formidable to them( a)?
193108317Why indeed fhould they, where they can not be relieved?
193108317Yet the national councils of Toledo, in which the free fpirit of the Barbarians was tempered?
193108317[ 476] sou j* JEneic?.
193108317^Smelling,>\y]5at 0f the fhark ’s fenfabon of fmell and — v purfuit, were there no victim in the ocean?
193108317a,, l&.ly, Ikozmj^ CL 7?
193108317an expeditiou?.
193108317and belides, what purpofe would it ferve?
193108317and what of the camel and the thiilly wanderer, were there no fountain of freih water in the Arabian deferts?
193108317and, Whether this or that hero ’s fame was well- founded?
193108317cx- n,, z^r „ A- r I-j~ r l/~l y?,''•''U''<£ r-[(& J''iv.
193108317d7^( tom/ may ‘ 11 e/ Teanzcc^Tiy; tSp?
193108317f ’\\;> 1 c^1/ n*t ■ sV mp^A 7 S?
193108317f
193108317feft proceeds from a caufe, Is indeed an axiom 5 but furely we may know the effect accurately, though we be ignorant of the particula?''
193108317law are tfiey connected?
193108317ly?, 1698 2
193108317p. 3. has difcoveied, that in February 1690-?
193108317that a body of homogeneous texture refills a Jimple Vwifi with two- ihird?
193108317that is, what is the mutual adtion be¬ tween the particles juft before their coming into abfolute contadt?
193108317the long., arm are S T E-[ 68 Sterl yard, are two pins( I and
193108317then izz 10= 1 X 10= z2X5?
193108317time that they extended the royal prerogative, of th^Ho?
193108317to the relative frength?
193108317u — y”''■^- f\/rvj- f*\''vA''°-^‘i r/ °^^ • • f''o a_, « r\ v-<
193108317what is the true proportion of the ftrength of columns?
193108317wherein lay the merit of fuch an aftion?
193108317“ If now it be afked, What are the intended objefls of our inquiries within thefe fpacious limits?
192692192* J But, as the pronoun of the third perfon is merely the fubftitute of fome noun, an objedor may alk, What noun is here reprefented by he?
192692192* f''; • M:; M:?
192692192-i Mll^^^5 lift: ■ p''.0- it-''‘ XT''.-.:»»/}?.
1926921921 he Greek prepofition viw?
1926921921 he Greek*(,**, the Latin «//?, th refpondent to 1 LJ j Frtnc|, J „ on all be i, not.
1926921921 heodore Lafcans to ft from David Comnenus, emperor of Trebtfond?
1926921922?.
19269219233?
1926921924- 5 by means of the verb; and the lime at which it belong-*''lieaives; dy means oi uie vciu?
1926921924^*?
19269219252,? • HADRIAN.
19269219259 and what other fpecies is fo general as e fence?
19269219266 Medufa?.
192692192< Charles VIL of France, by whom the firft Handing^ army in Europe was formed, anno 1434?
192692192?
192692192?
192692192All praftitioners are agreed, that no( hot can bt?
192692192All well How fare ye? ”& c. HAIMSUCKEN.
192692192And how far the mechanical felting, which is not confined merely to the hairs of animals, might- be applied to this art?
192692192And if i?
192692192And if there was fuch, the next queition is, From what metropolis it wras called Hemath?
192692192And the fame as to qualities and both quantities: for we fay, without an article, what sort of, how many, howt great?
192692192And why does our author forget Publius Scipio( Africanus ’s father), a prudent and able general, whom Hannibal vanquifhed at the Ticin?
192692192Are there no cafes, then, in which the relative may be refolved into the connedive and with a prepo- fitive pronoun?
192692192Are two four i is John a couple and Jane a couple?
192692192Bolides gold, ivory, and flaves, Guinea affords indi¬ go, wax, gum- fenega, gum- tragacanth, and a variety of other gums and drug?.
192692192But K whtenejs or f X ot^r P?
192692192But how long’will they keep this colony?
192692192But if both imply comparifon, it may be afked, In what coniifts the difference between the comparative and fuperlative?
192692192But if prepoftions be w7ords devoid of fgnifcation, why Ihould there be difputes refpeCling their numbers?
192692192But if the prefent tenfe be thus indefinite, howr, it may be afked, are we to afeertain the particular time which is intended?
192692192But is not that the cafe in all inftruments, except where the performer fits of neceffity?
192692192But the death of his brother, Dr James Grego¬ ry, in November 1755?
192692192By gram- 10?
192692192By the 1Cl?
192692192By wcre.r- “.We have now determined the velocity of the ihot W?
192692192C 2 Nouns, as they have( g) Man or child, philofopher, orator, poet, or foldier,& c.?
192692192Did ever any one fee Giardini or Fiftier play a folo fitting?
192692192Does one freight line form a triangle?
192692192Does the fuperlative always exprefs a greater excefs than the comparative?
192692192For example, fuppofe it fhould be afked, How differ honejl, honcjlly, and honejhy?
192692192For example, if we be allied, how the weather wall difpole of us to morrow?
192692192For why flop at a limited number, when in all fubjecls fufceptible of intenfion, the inter¬ mediate exceffes are in a manner infinite?
192692192G R E[ rfrrory,] i?
192692192GROGRAM, a kind of fluff made of filk and?
192692192Gmelin, in his edition of the Syjlctr.a Nature?, enu¬ merates 86 fpecies of the taenia.
192692192HANSE- Town?.
192692192Having always bufinefs before him?
192692192He embarked on the 22d of November 1702?
192692192He expreffed himfelf, upon occafions offered, to love and efteem moft fuch of the nobility as were moft anciently defcended?
192692192He was after¬ wards, on the foot of his great merit, chofen geo- ■? nctry profeffor of Grefham college.
192692192Here is alfo a court of inquifition; a royal tribunal j and an umverfity, founded in 1531?
192692192His examples are of exiftence, B IS j of qualified, B l?
192692192I here is, however, one grand divifion which neceffarn?
192692192If it be farther alked, how the refiftance of the air can ever come to be oblique to the progreffive mo¬ tion of the body?
192692192If we queftion aboutfiubfiances^vit can not fay, the who is this, but who is this?
192692192If, in- Itead of JOIN, we Ihould fay to him, a houfe WITH; he would ftill a Ik the fame queition, with what?
192692192If, to a difciple of Mr Har¬ ris, we Ihould fay, a houfe JOIN; he would reply, JOIN WHAT?
192692192Ihe word is compounded of « y(o?
192692192In another inftance, where the prince wiffied Mr Fulleiton, a Scotfman, to jfuperfede Sir Robert Car, one of vhe attendants of hi?
192692192In the ninth perpendicular row, that is, the laft to the right hand in the diatonic fcale, Hands C alone; but immediately behind is placed Bt?
192692192In what way then do I pro¬ ceed, in order to particularize it, fo as to make it de¬ note that very man whom I mean to fpecify?
192692192Is not his mader the king of England my fubjeft, or rather my dave?
192692192It is a place o?
192692192It is therefore a matter of perfeft indif¬ ference to the fenfe, whether we fay ftcknefs o?
192692192Meanwdiile, we beg leave in our turn to alk, Why are not tentajfe and percurrijfe reckoned abJlraB nouns as well as tentatio •and curfus?
192692192Nothing like copulation among thefe creatures w7as ever obferved by? vl.
192692192No¬ thing farther, however, was done till- the time of Ben-?
192692192Of thefe expe¬ riments, the two following may be taken as a fpeci- men?
192692192One is, that neceflity 01( landing, in order to do?, ny thing capital upon it.
192692192Perhaps, however, fomething nearly approaching, to an exemplification of cur idea of zjim-/>/
192692192Quedions all equally be afked, “ To be or not to be — What?
192692192Spe- lator, N 415?
192692192Such as Or Conjunction?
192692192Suriry de St Remy, why the culverin of Nancy, which is 22 feet long, did not carry a ball equally far with a{ hotter piece?
192692192Tab convitio laceratam matrem ad excolendum virtutis habitum revocavit ignes praefentibus illecebris pr^ferre docuit. ” U ’ prseteritofqu?
192692192The Greeks called them xjjgaxs?, and iier.-itpvl.xy.ii 5 and the Romans, fcciales.
192692192The fame no- ’ tion is countenanced by Wilfon in his Hillory f; and f?.
192692192The hailftones, many of wffiich weighed five ounces, and fome half a pound, and being five or fix inches about, w’ere of various fi¬ gure?)
192692192The man departs, and ‘ returns a week after: What do I then fay?
192692192The oftavo edition of his hiftory, publiffied in 177^?
192692192The queftion now occurs, How we are to provide ourfelves with a fucceflion of pleafurable engagements?
192692192The title of his pofthumous works runs thus: Chronographice jJfaticce et Kgyptiacce Specimen; in quo, I. Origo Chronologic?
192692192The town- houfe was credited in 1764?
192692192The ufual expreffion is, “ Hoa, the ftiip ahoay! ” To which ffie anfwers, “ Holloa?
192692192The univerlity of Gottingen is de- fervedly celebrated; and contains about 800 ftudents of different nations, and 60 profeffor?.
192692192The whole furface of the body i.?
192692192The word is formed of the Greek which fignities the number/even?
192692192The word is formed of yw* woman, and x^xrovfttto?, vanquifhed, of I over- come, q. d. overcome by women.
192692192Thefe motions grow languid as the water fails, and at laft ceafe alto- gether?
192692192Their general charafter and capacities are thus de- J 6] GYP fcribed: Imagine people of a childidi way of thinking*, Gypfir?.
192692192They by degrees extend-''p''neVwere ed themfelves to iuhf&LS incorporeal; and came to de- by decrees note relations,? isvsz\\intelle£lual as local.
192692192They were difcharged with great force, for at 60 yards diftance they went beyond the?
192692192Thus when it is faid, An fecifii?
192692192Thus, How often did you write?
192692192V''-.4?
192692192Vivit?
192692192We have feen what happinefs does? iot confift in.
192692192What cheer?
192692192What then is the force of the perfonal pronouns?
192692192What then is to be done?
192692192What then, it.may be alked, is the im¬ port of each article, and in what refpetls do tney differ?
192692192When we fay, where were you yeflerday?
192692192Whence came ye?
192692192Where are ye bound?
192692192Whether block¬ ing or fhaping be not an operation extremely well calcu¬ lated for the operation of one or more machines?
192692192Whe¬ ther loofe weaving and fubfequent felting might not pro¬ duce a lighter, cheaper, and ftronger article?
192692192Who does not feel that the affertion contained in ha¬ beret, is as abfolute and pofitive as any affertion what¬ ever?
192692192Why do they ufe the perfonal pronouns?
192692192Why then fhould the former founds produce confonances, and wffiy fhould the latter not produce them, fince all of them equally refult from nature?
192692192William had three horfes killed under him} and there fell near 1?, ooo men on the fide of the Normans.
192692192Within certain limits grandeur and fublimity pro¬ duce their flrongeft effe£ls., which leffen by excefs a?
192692192^ the j 8th order?
192692192_, farrago of ufelefs diftinclions into conjunctive, adjunC- Winch live, disjunBive, fuhjunBive, copulative, cortinuative, ™^ ™?
192692192and a double one at twice that fum; whence the fale of them GUN''[ IQ?]
192692192at a council affembled at Rheims, he wras committed to a clofe prifon in ltd ®?
192692192brother the duke of York, contrary to the inclination Hear?.
192692192can thoughtlefs mortals fail?
192692192d 1 y?
192692192f £ oZ, or JLZf Seen^forthefrjl- befm- e and now remembered?
192692192going?
192692192how do you perform your journey?
192692192is will be.of Words, readily granted", for what art was ever invented and 1 brought to a date of perfection by illiterate favages?
192692192l1;cl, the afferutm expreffed by it may be t ™?''
192692192name which the other is wholly ignorant?
192692192not be » a quedion g, wheth.f his confcious exidence and indefnile time?
192692192p. 113?
192692192s e indefinite lime rejlored?
192692192s, worth taking fo much pains to leave no memorial but a few poems?
192692192the butcher: but his highnefs anfwered coolly, “ WTat if the butcher ’s dog killed the flag, what could the butcher help it?
192692192they be introduced?
192692192time of/ peaking, but to the time of fuero, with refpect to which, who fees not that it is pafi?
192692192uem$ d ° ne UP0n 3 pieCe ° f cafl metal> four feet acrofs, of a circular lhape called « b7 fnl7 JOinin?
192692192v* t • c.,; n ■>/IH j/>=*; •; • f''V-? •^ ■ w lor n... 1 I"!
192692192whence have you come?
192692192will it never again be reflored to France?
192692192would any man of common fenfe fuppofe, that the word Jlrange, becaufe uttered alone, had loft the power of an adjeBive and become an interjeBion?
192692192‘ dor"? to France.
192692192“ Annon legiftis, quod qui eos in pnneipio creavit, creavit eos marem et feminarn? ”( e) Thefe are complex terms becaufe they are verbs.
192692192“ How dare( faid he) this old, deaf, doating fool, difobey my commands?
192692192“ Is he brave?
192692192“ Is he learned?
192692192“ The man of he fpeak s little is wife! ” Who is meant by the pronoun he?
192692192„ G li A f Grandeur the fubjetft: he enjoys an elevation equal to that of anc?
192692192•^vcimnlpQ- in WHICH tilC r?
192692192■ w.tnmjrx''si it/I T03 IGA j-''?
193108316( X — A?)
193108316( i—.t)-f- c — loR-( 1 — x) x''log,( I — A?)
193108316( « 4-l)( «+ 2) i ’ r_”(”+i)?
193108316( «+2)_ r?
193108316), and was therefore probably th?
193108316*- 2 a^ a-\-n—1 ’ ‘ ’( t+a)- ‘''+ 2+?
193108316, 0 t, “ Coi)_ The ca nt of the faftiion- piece being reprefented, the ftuufhoricf ca nt of the other timbers may now be eafily determi- Ship?, ned.
193108316, n—1 •( n — i)a?
1931083160-f 2)Q+3)—20+ 3)4- 2^-f- l)(^-f-2)(?
1931083161 he line WM being drawn, let any point h in it be aflumed at pleafurc 1 from k draw h y perpendicular to g M: through y draw?//( fig.
1931083161 his is a particular of much importance Pa1^ the to be adverted to at the time of beginning to breed cnTf- ofm-?
193108316101 A. D. 116, Papias, a hearer of John, and companion Of Papia?.
19310831615, 16. amounts to this negative queftion, ‘ Is it not fitted that the free gift ftiould extend as far as the offence? ’ “ VIII.
19310831617 So, P* 354- SEA[ 68^ but on the coaft it frequently reaches the height of 45 J^eet?
19310831618657.8yy 279oi*7 t?
193108316197 Epiftle to the Philip¬ pian?.
1931083162 Produd?, Feet.
1931083164i? ¥ 4 t Sfi 3i SU The price of wheat has at different periods been very remarkable.
1931083165] SCR Shall I give my/irfi- bom for my tranrgreiTion f Scripture, The fruit of my body for the fin of my foul?''
1931083165th of November; and a great number of occafional paffages to the fame purpofe, in various parts of his leXure?
1931083166 10 6 S''?
1931083166?.
1931083166—Motes was In anfwer to the objeflion, To what then ferveth not obliga-/aw?
193108316?
193108316? w wltih Luike fA 2 ’ “ n were better for him that a rnillftone were hanged about his neck, and he cad into the iea.
193108316?+ R rV- f-(P/>H~ Q.
193108316About this time, Orofius having gone thTApobf k ° m Spa^n ‘ nto-Africa and thence into Paleftine, pub- c/ Orq/ iut?
193108316After the Mahometan has placed himfelf in the boat, they a(k him, who is the mailer of that river?
193108316And is it fair to queftion the veraci¬ ty of refpeftable men merely becaufe we knew not from what writings they received their information?
193108316And what motive could induce them to receive it among their facred books?
193108316Are not my eyes guilty alike with theirs, I hat thus can gaze, and yet not turn to ftone?
193108316Are the Alps or the Apen¬ nines, or Taurus, or Caucafus, lefs lofty now than they were a thoufand years ago?
193108316As to the date of this Epiftle nothing beyond conje£lure can be pro- duC£?
193108316But who will deny that Lucretius, Plorace, Virgil, Livy, Te¬ rence, Tully, are at once the fimpJed and bed of Ro¬ man writers?
193108316But why then are they fabled to be deftroyers, and painted in fuch dreadful colours?
193108316By this means the balance of adticn on the two bows is deftroyed; the general impulfe on the lee- bow is increafed; and that on the weather- bow?
193108316By what means, it has been afked, may a man protedt his property?
193108316Can a frngle uncontrovertible inftance be produced of this?
193108316Coriolanus, fpeaking to his mother, What is this?
193108316Could eyes endure to guide fuch cruel hands?
193108316Draw the line qQ v parallel to the yards, cut¬ ting D in E
193108316Du Pin has alked, wrhy were feventy- two interpreters employed, fince twelve would have been fufficient?
193108316Et ne fuis- je blanchi dans les travaux guerriers, Que pour voir en un jour fletrit tant de lauriers?
193108316Even in the fouth ° f over warm- France, Mr Arthur Young informs us, the mulberry er countrie?
193108316Every thing we call pleafure, happinefs, or enjoyment, on the one hand?
193108316Faut- il de votre eclat voir triompher le comte, Et mourir fans vengeance, ou vivre dans la honte?
193108316FhA Prodiud?
193108316For my part,( continues Melanc- s?]
193108316Fortia magnanimi canerem fi Ceefaris arma, Fadlave Divorum religiofa virum: Quot mifer exciperemque notas, patererque lituras?
193108316Fraclions, fractions whole denominators proceed in a fexagecuple ratio; that is, a prime, or the firit minute —; a fe¬ cond= t''S''Vo''?
193108316From A and B fet up the heights of the lower and upper breadth lines to I and K, and draw the ftraight lines IK?
193108316From IVI draw M2 perpendicular to 7/ and from?/ draw y n perpendicukr to WM( fig.
193108316He calls the Pharifees lovers of money; in diftinguifhing Judas Ifcariot from the other Judas, he ufes the phrafe, he who proved a traitor,( o?
193108316Hence V reprefenting the volume, we fhall have V X.?
193108316His affability and condcnfcenfion gained him the hearts of the common 2.5] S E J foldiers, and, by appointing his owm favourites and ad- S- jinu?.
193108316His body was dragged to the Gemonite, and, af¬ ter every fpecies of infult from the populace, at the end o?
193108316How did God create the world?
193108316How long{ hall this world remain?
193108316How then came a traffic fo-""v unnatural and unjuft as that of Haves to be originally in¬ troduced into the world?
193108316How were thefe pnloners to be difpofed of?
193108316I I 2 15 6 o 47 8 o 88 4 6 130 o o 173 11 5 217 9 o 257 10 b 292 o o 322 1 6 340 10 o 348 9 6 324 o o 250 3 o X?
193108316I think fhe{ firs again — No — what ’s the beft?
193108316If the writings of the New Teftament had been forged, would not the Jews have detecled the impofture?
193108316In che mifero punto hor qui me men a Fortuna?
193108316In this acceptation we find it ufed in Scripture- f: “ Hold the traditions(-nx?
193108316Is it extraordinary, then, that in writing to the inhabitants of Rome he fhould have ufed a language which\vas there fo generally under- ftood?
193108316Is it not fuf- ficient that our predeceffor has fuffered the judges to remain unemployed thefe 13 years?
193108316Is there any book in the world fo perfeclly a- dapled to all capacities?
193108316Is this nothing to all you who pafs along the way?
193108316It alfo appears that/><“?m
193108316It has been a queftion in morals, whether it be not likewife the incentive to every aftion, however, virtuous or apparently difinterefted?
193108316J o a caufe truly Chriftian, who did not pray for fuccefs?
193108316Lb?.
193108316Let the feries continued to n terms be T(i)-j- T(»)-|-T(?)
193108316Let the line L? •, which is the lower edge of the keel, reprefent alfo the middle line of the floor plan.
193108316Let x be the thicknels of the feclion reprefented bv ABC.^ Then the momentum of this fe&ion will be 2 BO 6 X a?
193108316Make Cot, E ot, each equal to half the thicknefs of the fternpoft, and C «, Et?, equal to half the thicknefs of the ftern, and join mm, nn.
193108316Many books which were then extant are now loft 3 and how do we know but thefe might have contained fuf- ficient evidence?
193108316May he kill the perfon who at¬ tacks it, if he can not otherwife repel the attack?
193108316My friends, do they now and then fend A wi(h or a thought after me?
193108316N ° of Ft. N ° of lb?.
193108316Now?
193108316N’ai- je done tant vecu que pour cette infamie?
193108316Objection But what benefit, it will be allied, will the negroes to the aba- of Africa reap from an abolition of the Have trade?
193108316On being alked whether he was not afraid of coming into the prefence of the king, confidering the office he might poffibly have to perform?
193108316On board of every private fhip ike drum is beaten, or the bell is chimed, every quarter-''Naval Signal?.
193108316Or their borders greater than their borders?
193108316Or will the benevolent Lord of all things pardon us fci^ oppreffing our helplefs brethren, merely becaufe they are cruelly opprelfed by others?
193108316Plane?.
193108316Quel prodige nouveau me trouble et m’em- barralTe?
193108316Quot fierem teneris fupplicium pueris?
193108316SELINUM, a genus of plants belonging to the pent- andria clafs$ and in the natural method ranking under the 45th order, Umbellate?.
193108316SEXTON,.a church- officer, thus called by corrup¬ tion of the Latin//cry?
193108316Shall I come before him with burnt- offerings, With calves of a year old?
193108316Shall not then the fouls of good men re- Shatter, ceive rewards?
193108316Shall{ lie come in?
193108316Si tota eft Herculis Oete, Et juga tota vacant Bromio Nyfeia; quare Unus in Egypto Magno lapis?
193108316Slup?.
193108316So important then is the queftion, Whether the books of the New Teftament be genuine?
193108316Suppodng the veracity of thefe two wri¬ ters equal, as we have no proof of the contrary, which ef them ought we to confider as the bed evidence?
193108316The general form of a feries of this kind is a, a-\-d, a-\-2d, «+ 3 d, «+4&cc''m A- f- « C-\-q D= o, m B- b « C-{-/> D+ 1?
193108316The queftion, however, was put, Proceed to an higher cenfure, or not?
193108316The quellion then of any importance is, May a man put a robber to death Self, rather than part with a fmall part of his property?
193108316The rabbet on the poll and item may alfe be reprefented • and the ftations of the timbers affigned, as 0,( i), I?
193108316Thefe remarks extend to the Old Teftament as well as to the New.—Thejfr/?
193108316Their character was quite the reverfe: their refpeft for the Scripture had degenerated into fuperftit?
193108316Then CO- f- OM—220 °, which being taken from 360 ° leaves 140 °, of which the half is 7 ° °?
193108316Then, by the nature of the centre of gravity, M- fwz: M — G m: g m—%: g m, and f?i IY12 ss, and m''g n?
193108316This feems to have been brought into ufe as a fubftitute for the ancient^4/?
193108316Thus Cicero: Ea?
193108316Upon be¬ ing afked by Hiero ’s queen, Whether it was moft de- firable to be learned or rich?
193108316What becomes of it after death?
193108316What effeCt then mnft they have upon the Europeans,^ fudden- ly tranfported into this burning: climate?
193108316What fir all we think of God?
193108316What is the nature of that abforbed ftate which the fouls of good men enjoy after death?
193108316What is time?
193108316What other are the foregoing indances but defcribing the paflion another feels?
193108316What perfection were they capable of who knew no other attitude than that of chairmen?
193108316What though no facred earth allow thee room, Nor hallow’d dirge be mutter’d o’er thy tomb?
193108316What( hall become of me now?
193108316When alked by Mr Bruce why he murdered the king ’s young fon in his father ’s prefence?
193108316When the fnip begins to tend to leew’ard, and the Tending to buoy gomes on the weather- quarter, the firft thing tolefwar
193108316When the king gave it Townfcnd, s''a''?
193108316Wherewith fliall I bow myfelf unto the High God?
193108316Whether Ins diligence and accuracy have been fuch that we may at ail times depend upon them?
193108316Whether he has quoted his manuferipts either falfely or imperfeCtly, in order to eltablilh his own religious opinions?
193108316Who, I, my lord?
193108316Why are new femations always more body,( as in the cafe of particular organs or faculties agreeable and variety fo pleafing?
193108316Will Jehovah be pleafed with thoufands of rams?
193108316With refpeft to the epiftle to the Romans, it may be afked indeed wby St Paul did not write in Latin?
193108316With ten thoufands of rivers of oil-•?
193108316Your knees to me?
193108316_ 1< 5 That the favage nations of Africa were at any period Slavery a?
193108316_ Pafquin was dreffed one morning in a very nafty ftiirt, and being allied by Marforio why he wore fuch dirty linen?
193108316a che veduta amara e trifta?
193108316a?
193108316aAreeS r- r?
193108316and his extraordinary title of Lapis, for which no fatisfac- tory reafon is commonly given, have a conneaion with the Indian philofophy and mythology?
193108316by Intel- left?
193108316draw the lines GF, 3 A, 2 S, 1 H, per- Fi?
193108316ffrrtfc9?
193108316is not fo important as the quedien, whether they are genuine?
193108316m m-\-l, «, m4- 2.. „ xr-1= xn-1 4 — xn4 a?”+*4--^.r»tJ4-,& c,^«4-i “ « 4- 2 X X* X*, X* n j 4— ■ —h 1-?
193108316no more moving?
193108316nor the fouls of the bad meet with pu-,^ nifhment?
193108316of the Ihftrument, and which are to be ufed as feftoral 1 n> v-~- lines?
193108316of the mail, where it is cut by the line CV, FlS- I?
193108316or is it credible that thefe events could be related by any perfon but a contemporaiy?
193108316p. 318- Swin¬ burne''s Travels, P-? 8j.
193108316ployed in fortifying Alexandria with walls, adorning it Cpiut?
193108316poor wenches, where are now your fortunes?
193108316r 3467 374- 27 473292 10096.26 16678.00 24696.35 33553- 62-4) X?
193108316r> Plate CC Cr. LXXX.VL W^Tfrr/ n Sci/ lfy?,.
193108316reprefent the legs of the fee- ccccIkxvu?.
193108316taking now the fluxions, and fubflituting inftead off> the expreflion it was put to reprefent, we get.„wi — 2 sxm-1-f-( « — I).r a?
193108316the end of 56 about 06lober 57 about February? 8 about April 61 about May 61 bef.
193108316to your correfted fon?
193108316wer’t good?
193108316what wife?
193108316where are the charms That fages have feen in thy face?
193108316which interviews the relations being pre- fent?
193108316—(* — «)( x — d)( x — n''") y( 72"77)( «"Tl)(Tl"77"'') ’ 5_(# — 7?)
193108316“ Syracufe had fcarcely time to breathe after her vie- Dion> fin?
193108316“ The quedion( fays he), whether the books of 4 1* the New Tedament are infpired?
193108316“ What are the moft whole- fome aliments for feamen, confidering the impoffibility of procuring them freffi meat?
193108316• 7/ h?
193108316™?
193108316■ v — ■ S 1 M[ 3 • fented to us In the queftions of phyficc- malliematic?!
191253819$ may we not fay, that at prefent they are worth fome 20,cool, or 30,000!.?
191253819( l 4-*+ A^+^-C. 4- 5?
191253819-= VTH1?
191253819-»Ttyi|;? f t''*-A'', i i lliSP-%* s ■ ■ ■_*^r.
191253819.,''''VA'': ‘''— n l C 1^^-~ A Ai''-''''"m£m tA-^P L? » fei teip^''■''.
191253819.. iX v’-XA">. ■:''-:r A''W: X''SXt%*''"'''':i*-*??
191253819.. iX v’-XA">. ■:''-:r A''W: X''SXt%*''"'''':i*-*??
191253819... v''''*- m- i|?
191253819.....''«.•''..''J^-5-*;^^ tv; f X''• J, «- § m H%''MhgrlMTZ t v>-^?
191253819.A?
191253819/^l « o a prr"z x^ 2 7> X^ 3 3 v V d 6?
1912538191 Tmhnua/ m X b r X e p^ is* h/ k A H M n « y n y A T UA?
191253819100 muft denote 10 Now by the queftion Hence we have 10—x—^x/ x —^x^ Or a,-[-3a?
1912538192(2-bco^ 2(a+ 6?
19125381930= 4 cV — s — — 4r3-f- 3.?
1912538194 2A-{-4 2X-\-6 4 6/ v 18: 32 3X+3 T 2^+4—9^ —''l k2‘:v+I2+^''r+][6—3^ 4—6x — Or 20x4- 28=366—6a?
19125381941?
1912538194?
1912538195:=: TTa6_{“TV^^d-\-~i^]d^ lr''=.i%a*—\a*d+\cdd''and therefore, by fubtra&ion, tt?
1912538196> O\''k a 7 I A H4 V4 K 17?
191253819: What is the value of lib* of the mixture?
191253819: What quantity of each muft he take?
191253819:{'',"-a--4 v"''*-^skg 4V “-? ’.
191253819
191253819> 1 C> 3 F 8 1 7 4< U\/vX I 7(\ □ O 1 I J I''M H A A c p £^ V V 47 2 T A B C D E r M I c vz A1/^,/y A S S 0?
191253819?
191253819?
191253819?> imm J J J<, • • ■''11....-A.. A:''.Pi;.- —--''■ ■ • ■''''.
191253819A L G: Cubic 2 2 Equations, and therefore?
191253819A poft is i of its length in the mud, y m the water, and xo feet above the water, what is its whole length?
191253819ALADINISTS, a fe£l among the Mahometan?, anfwering to freethinkers among us.
191253819According to Spel- man, the aldermannus totius Anglic?
191253819Alban re¬ plied,1 “ To wThat purpbfe do you inquire of my fa¬ mily?
191253819And how ftiould it be otherwife?
191253819And may they not do the fame in Britain?
191253819And, taking the fquare of both fides, — — A= I—''A?
191253819As he returned from jezreel to Samaria, the prophet Elijah met him, and faid, “ Haft thou killed and alfo taken poffeflion?
191253819But do the allies produce this effefl by a fort of corrofive power?
191253819But how much more liable to wafte is a mixture of dung and urine, with barely a iufficiency of ftraw to keep them together?
191253819But the greateft bene- iit, where no fruit- trees are planted, a rife?
191253819By the binomial theorem we have( 1 1 n{n—1) t «(/? —!
191253819Can the water be drawn oft"from the meadow as quick.as it is brought on?
191253819Can this be owing to the agitation accafioned by boiling, or the expulfion of the aerial acid?
191253819Does it not import the farmer to have good hay and grafs in plenty?
191253819Ehudcum X''0 Z CX>''7/^L A J''7 o 1 q V/ X+ ■ p X/ X 7 9 3/ 8 J £ C, X Xs 7 O y 5 j x ‘ pV?
191253819Equations with ratio¬ nal Root?.
191253819Having formed an alliance, in 177 °?
191253819He then aiked her, whether( he would accompany him in his wars?
191253819Hence, by fubftituting thefe values of 27, x, 222, 22 in the firft general formula of( § 267) we have r I.27* 2 1.2.37* 5''L 1.2.37 jcx?
191253819How common is it for writers, who affe£l to be comic, when in Want of other means for raifing a fmile, to ufe af- fe&ed alliteration with fuccefs?
191253819How many fheep did he buy, and what did each cod him?
191253819How many leaps mull the greyhound take to catch the hare?
191253819How many were in company?
191253819How7 is this to be reconciled?
191253819How7 many did he buy of each?
191253819I.2.5.?
191253819If it be afked in Europe, Why do they not repair the New Port?
191253819If it be required to find the fame powers of cj — it Involution, will be found, that"X x+?
191253819If x be now fuppofed negative, and AP be"taken on the other fide- of Ar then yz=.b X( l 66 g?
191253819If, however, the equation have this form, X* 4--Arl+-A?
191253819In order to make this comparifon, let the cube of\q be taken, alfo the fquare of{ r, the refults are t’t''?
191253819In the Memoirs of the Royal Society of A- root?''
191253819It is required to divide the numbet I0 Quadratic into two fuch parts, that the fum of their fquares may Equation?
191253819Its waters were reckoned good in the leprofy, which is called AA^o?
191253819J ✓?
191253819JUU w VV Still(^
191253819L T U R E. 409 In the feme volume, a gentleman of Norfolk remarks, Culture of that manuring the ground in autumn for turnips is pre- P- fbcula?
191253819L T U R E. Practice.. “ Do they remain in the pafture from morning till Manage- night?
191253819Let n be a number of which the lo¬ garithm is already found$ then fubllituting y in the laft formula we have for T,&c 1 n- j- z 1[ 2z t I 2z?
191253819Let x*-l~/>xz- j- t/ xtj- r= o be any cubic equation j if wre fubftitute y-|- « for x, the equation is changed into the following: 5+ 3?
191253819Let x= chord of a, and y= chord of its fup¬ plement, then, putting o, 1, 2, 3,& c. fucceflively for 7?, and obferving that ch.
191253819Manure?
191253819Pinchinin, in the mean time, made feveral unfuccefsful attempts to re¬ lieve his men, as well as to furround the Dutchman with his Qthe?
191253819Plants Part L AGRI CULT UR 1L- Culture of Ppian?
191253819Rezin king of Syria and?
191253819Searching every kingdom for the man who has the leaft comfort in life, Where is he to be found? — In the royal palace.
191253819See Botan?
191253819T// c?
191253819That gentleman is ing hedge?, of opinion, that, in fome cafes deadfione walls, as they are called, are more advantageous than hedges.
191253819The French took it in 1745?
191253819The fum of all the terms may be found thus: let s reprefent that fum, then, fuppofing the number of terms to be fix, szza-^ar-^-ar1 •{ ■ ar1-{-a?
191253819The governor having afked him of what family he w’as?
191253819The occupier of fuch lands is ftrenuoully ad- vifed to let no time be loft in appropriating, them to this ufe?
191253819The only quellion, therefore, is, How far the railing a crop of them may be profitable to an huffiandman?
191253819The word is compounded of the privative a and Aaye?, q. d;''Without Logos or Word.
191253819There are not lefs than 12, which are from 2400 toifes high to above? 000.
191253819There is in all ftreams a defeent greater or fmall- pend?.
191253819Therefore, taking the produdl of the extremes and means, 2400—ioo.v= a?
191253819Therefore-a_ 9004-(?
191253819They attribute lefs effi¬ cacy to the true belief in the falvation of men than the reft of the Muffulman?.
191253819This race of priefts was expelled by Ab- sharifs 0?
191253819Though it is impoffible to prevent the effe£ls of fruit trees old age?
191253819Though, with regard to thefe, there? s a great difpute whether they are to be underftood lite¬ rally or fpiritually.
191253819Thus a, a4, and a?
191253819Thus in the equation.r — ay+b — c, the quantity a?
191253819Thus the equation a?
191253819To carry home this unworthy load to his indigent wife and children, poor Corregio had?
191253819To what purpofe did they take the trouble of inventing other charaders?
191253819We therefore relume the equation r*—y, where r,.a?, andy denote as before, we are to find a value of x in terms of r and y.
191253819What dependance can we put in the opinion of a writer who thus contradi&s himfelf?
191253819What is it then that deflroys the rete mucofum in fuch perfons?
191253819What is their prefent ages?
191253819What of that immoderate love of boys, which Athenaeus relates of him?
191253819What of that prodigious-number of waves and concubines which he kept?
191253819When this is done, it will then( lows aft£?
191253819Whether, the ftream of water will admit of a temporary, dam or wrare acrofs it?
191253819Who is he that can intercede with him but through his good pleafure?
191253819Why do they not confider, that com{ landing dries in half a day; when, in a clofe ftieaf, the weather muft be favourable if it dry in a month?
191253819Why fhould notone nation, it maybe urged, adopt from the other the mode of expreffing the art as w’ell as the art itfelf?
191253819Why haft thou then broken down her hedges, fo that all that pafs do pluck her?
191253819^ vf^*?
191253819an acre for the courfe?
191253819and gained as much per cent as the cloth coft him 3 what was the price of the cloth?
191253819and his livery} what was its value?
191253819and will cattle thrive equally on ail forts of food?
191253819f 9 4 f 9/?
191253819having aiked him one day, why he did not enter into orders?
191253819he anfwered, Becaufe I would be free to marry. ” The pope rejoined, “ If fo, why do you not marry?
191253819head of the ditch above mentioned, juft where it enters the field to be watered?
191253819his Majefty?
191253819his conduft, and?
191253819his land to.grafs, what does he do?
191253819how many pounds of almonds were in the mixture?
191253819i% fe.f?!
191253819j f, ’-g# ii*1 a•?- v''- ill x%*- Wm X X>- X-;''-T^ Vi''-r, r#%,''a Ar ■;-.
191253819l xl X j S S J ° 0 4i i r* 7\<\ 3 3$# 6 0(\) Ph T «< 2 E Sell T O £ 3 3X z/^ y, ri X Q 9^c/9 a 7? ia cf/VKI1P4 Xv''iTX xr X aA.
191253819not onjy to a cr0p 0f corn?
191253819of then 0 I+V=( 1r=1+"£^4-then= 0fG biems- y''=a+bx+cx* 2 V 2 9 trica Hence by proper redu&ion Therefore, by fubtra&ion,^^ reome-?
191253819p p 0,2 Px P rx T r A A A dil XL I X L X o p Q B r. T IT A cc c 6^ cg e 1?
191253819per gallon: How much It wine, and how much water, muft he take?
191253819per gallon?
191253819term of the transformed equa¬ tion wall be 1-f/’H-?
191253819the advan¬ tage of a conftantftream?
191253819theix: 5 28 Fence?.
191253819trees?
191253819v?
191253819was paid in guineas and moidores; the number of pieces of both forts that were ufed was 100; how many were there of each?
191253819y.z 7+^+7—47 4 5 H+s=38 ► To find a?, y, and z.
191253819yet how is it much lefs abfurd to do what is equivalent in relation to graffes?
191253819±-^—1?, then 2, 2*=_ £= Z±4i and\iv~-fxd£±E, then 2 2 0.——4+^4- 4?
191253819±-^—1?, then 2, 2*=_ £= Z±4i and\iv~-fxd£±E, then 2 2 0.——4+^4- 4?
191253819“ But wffiat( fays he) are thorough- brei) cart horfcs?
191253819“ To this defeription who can refufe the praife of magnificence?
191253819“ With the latter, the firft queftion for confidera- tion is, whether eight oxen ufed in the team or in graz¬ ing will pay him the moft money?
191253819■ x za?
191253819■,..''isKvglt&tit Lfr>.\.vs&;*''"» ’, r ” ‘-?.
191253819□>?
191689061), which has its top and two fides Fl--52- flat or ftraight, and the end BAE
191689061... 33?
1916890611 ’ N!\ r Nt A ’ r 1 c t?
191689061120 Violent pafiion?.
19168906123. no The mo¬ dern dra¬ ma pre¬ ferable to the ancient P O F, inftrumental, adapted to the fubjed?
19168906132a Partly con¬ troverted by Euler, but with¬ out fuffi- cient ground?.
19168906135. and 39. j they Aide in a collar of leather? • r, fig.
1916890613?
191689061469 s?
1916890614? r 5- Ditto.
1916890615?
191689061657^What is air?
19168906176 ‘ found to exift in feveral individuals of a fpecies, and Natul?
19168906193*)?
191689061: of all the enlightened part of mankind, that they are gratified by the contemplation of things natural, as op poled to unnatural?
191689061?
191689061?
191689061?
191689061? e 0 J city of ra- alr"_ refied air* Let gh( fig.
191689061A commercial treaty about this time was entered into with France, the term?
191689061A juice was alfo drawn, from cedar, with which they fmeared their books and writings,.or other matters, to preferve them from rot-?
191689061A queftion which naturally arifes in every thinking mind is, What is the effence of life, or on what does it de¬ pend?
191689061And are the abfurdities of madmen proper fubjecfts either of amufement or of imi¬ tation to reafonable beings?
191689061And therefore the only proper queftion is, Whether our model be or be not a real improvement?
191689061And what aftoniffiing evidences of wifdom do we not obferve in the general laws of the material world?
191689061As he wras going to execution, a perfon who wras his intimate friend afked him if he had any meflage for his fon?
191689061BD — Ay- J- B5, and therefore oubPituting this value of £ in the former value of v B, which wc have v= x/g.[*H?-D)--A(Q-?)]
191689061Beyond
191689061But Mr Smeaton found, that his pump, even after lone?
191689061But if fo, wiiy needs the water rife?
191689061But if intom*iiL one cafe fubftances may thus be carried into the circula- P* tion, why not in many others?
191689061But if this be the cafe, mult the experiment be made in every poffible variety of fitu¬ ation, depth, figure, preffure?
191689061But in other parts of his writings he frequently afl’erts, as fu- perior to the felf- moving principle, an immoveable m ’?
191689061But notwitk- l?
191689061But what do we mean by the nature of any thing?
191689061But where, it may be faid, is this pat¬ tern of perfeftion to be found?
191689061But who can number ev’ry fandy grain Wafti’d by Sicilia''s hoarfe- refounding main?
191689061But why do we only feel the inequality of preffure?
191689061By anger the mufcles are rendered protuberant: Are not, then, the angry mind, and the protuberant mufcles, as caufe and effedt?
191689061Could fuch figures and combinations give pleafure, or merit the appellation of fublime or beautiful?
191689061Cur ego, fi nequeo ignoroque, Foeta falutor?
191689061D=^2<_P±^_ P I>,__ I) x P ArP — DP, d — D_ D X P- f/>—DP P+Z — P_?+/> d therefore v= n x y. L> XP- f^ P P+P, which confidered.
191689061Does this take place in confe- quenCe of an increafed fecretion of the nervous matter?
191689061Draw the horizontal line ef and make fh equal to FH j then A
191689061Eut does any thing fimilar exiil in the inferior claffes, and particularly in the loweft?
191689061Fig.?*.
191689061From thefe obfervations, may it not rather be fuppofed that this ftate is the effeft of a change in the chemical nature of the nervous fubftance?
191689061He became bifhop of Mafia, afterwards of Frefcati; a cardinal in 1461, under the name of Cardinal de Pavie; and died in 1479?
191689061He was not fatisfied with their leftures j but, upon P L O[ 65 Plotinu?.
191689061How can this increafe of weight be accou»ted for, unlefs by abforption?
191689061How comes it then that we are not fenfible of 38 a preffure which one ftiould think enough to cruih us^ difficulty together?
191689061How difficult then, how impoftible indeed, muft this variety of the fame countenance render precifion?
191689061How great a difference is made between a perfon of high birth and a tradefman •, between a Newton or Defflfer- tes and a fimple mathematician?
191689061How was the blood to get from the right to the left ventricle?
191689061Howr is this accounted for, Dr Currie alks, un- kfs by cutaneous abforption?
191689061I N[ 56 Pinti?.
191689061II 239 333 404 457 500 544 582 611 642 666 693 71 T III IV x.66 2.32 2.79 3- 1?
191689061If there needs mull be a reformation, wffiy not reftore the ancient chorus and the ancient continuity of adiion?
191689061In ftiort, let- be the diftance of the particles, the number of them in any given veffel, and therefore the denfity will be as a?
191689061Is it of all things the mod: variable and the mod arbitrary?
191689061Is it poffible to refift the conclufion, that between fuch a mind and fuch a countenance there is a determi¬ nate relation?
191689061Is not this a plain ac- EciairePy knowledgment of the reality of inhalation?
191689061Is there any precife degree of impreflion to which they do not yield\ and do they oppofe any re¬ finance to motion?
191689061Is there in fame animals a Jixth fenfe?
191689061Is there then no¬ thing fixed wfith regard to happinefs?
191689061Is this owing to a more accurate proportion in the re¬ lative perfedlion of the external organs, fo that one does not fo much furpafs another?
191689061It has* however* been alked whether or not is the- embryo formed by the joint operation of the two fexes?
191689061It is by no means an idle queftion, “ What is this air of which fo much is faid and written? ” We fee no¬ thing, we feel nothing.
191689061It is not memory, or the knowledge?
191689061It may be doubted w7hether this be fufhciently precife j what is meant by the fmallcfl imprefjion?
191689061Its operation1?
191689061Let us now fuppofe that the air in the veffel ABCD Fis?.
191689061Lymphatic and Gelatinous fluids, Nervous fluid?
191689061Lymphatic and Gelatinous fluids, Nervous fluid?
191689061Monftrous lights pleafe but for a moment, if they pleafe at all j for they derive their^?
191689061Much remains yet to be done both for per- Th?
191689061Now what is infer¬ red from thefe phenomena?
191689061Nowr, fuppofe we carry it Hill higher, and that the mercury Hands at 29.8; it is required to know what height we have nowr got to?
191689061Or who can Titer on''s gen’rous works exprefs, Of Lyric And tell how many hearts his bounteous virtues blefs?,^try- t Ode to Theron."
191689061Or would luch a chaos of events, any more than a chaos of exift- ences, have given us any notion of a forming and direct¬ ing hand?
191689061Or, finally, is the fubftance by which thefe proceffes are effedled of a different nature?
191689061P N E U M cto&rines) found in this fancied horror of a fancied mind( what elie is this that nature abhors?)
191689061PHOENICQPTERUS, or Flamingo, a genus of bird?
191689061Plate CCCCXXV3I1-4^?
191689061Salivary glands, Liver, Pan¬ creas, Kidneys, Tejles, Mucous glands, Mem¬ branes,& c. Miliaryglands, Brain?
191689061She?
191689061Should we hefitate to pronounce their author mad?
191689061Sign?
191689061Singing their great Creator? — — Par.
191689061Sur¬ faces of 9, 16, 36, and 81 inches, moving with one ve¬ locity, had refiitances in the proportion of 9, I7 t?
191689061Tears, Mucus, Saliva, Gaf¬ tric juice, Pancreatic juice, Bile, Lymph, Synovia, Fat, Marrow, Cerumen, Se¬ men, Urine, Milk, Ner¬ vous fluid?
191689061The Heet of tha ocean came: he fought, and tire ftrangers fell: he fearched for death over the field; but who could kill the mighty Comal?
191689061The Ruffians ufe the boletus laricinus a?
191689061The author finding Piron behind the fcenes, afked him what he thought of his performance?
191689061The caufes of theyfr/?
191689061The fecond he confidered as mind, the wifdontor reafon of the firft, and the maker of the world; and therefore he ftyles him yonj Aoyo?
191689061The name is derived from xtto tv( pgsaflo?, becaufe it flood in a pit; or, as others fuppofe, from the hero Phreatus.
191689061The queftion before us in this place is, Flow is this brought about by the weight and elafticity of the air?
191689061The tn- Chandler''s trance of the Piraeus is narrow, and fonned by two rocky^jaTels m points, one belonging to the promontory of Eelicn, the^?
191689061The word is derived from( puc- if, “ nature, ” and Aoy#?, “ a difcourfe 5 ” and figni- fied originally what we may call natural knowledge.
191689061Thefe abbreviations are now peculiar to the poetical tongue?
191689061Then the O; time in feconds of completely filling it will be t^666 ’ 11<; 2"or 1.7297"666 If the hole is only of fquare inch3 that is?
191689061There is alfo a neat view of the principal fads relating to this fubjed in a thefis De Vul- nere Nature?
191689061This is the ftyle of the plant, and the pila?
191689061This was the opi¬ nion of Dr Haller,( Ffiy?
191689061Vv here art thou, my love?
191689061W hy fliould they defign them only by an epithet, wnthout ever annexing their proper name?
191689061We may hope to extend it,1^^?
191689061What are the pleafures of the table, fays Cicero, of gaming, and of women, compared with the delights of iludy?
191689061What can it be but uncertainty and miftake?
191689061What de¬ fires have children?
191689061What do we mean by the in- trodu6fion of fecondary caufes r How do we infer the agency of any caufe whatever?
191689061What fup- ports him then in feenes of fo exquifite fuffering?
191689061What is the definition of a fluid?
191689061What is the precife phenomenon which cha- Mechanical raderifes fluidity?
191689061What is the true notion of an epifode?
191689061What pleafure would it have given to Newton or Halley to have feconded the ingenious efforts of a Watt, a Boulton, a Smeaton, an Arkwright, a Dollond?
191689061What was to be done in this cafe?
191689061When we talk therefore of a fublime objecl, we always under- ftand that it is alfo beautiful?
191689061Whence, then, the affertion, that we are fur- rounded with a matter called air?
191689061Who does not efteem and admire Macbeth for his courage and generofity?
191689061Why do w- e awake fuddenly, or from caufes which do not appear calculated to reftore that fubftance?
191689061Why fhould we ambitioufly aferibe to one mind every fpecies of human excellence?
191689061Wliy does cold produce fleep?
191689061Would die detects they think of making a new language to exprefs theot''in‘ljle qualities of mind?
191689061Would it be of any fervice in the yellow fever, fo prevalent in the weftern world?
191689061Would we ever have fuppofed any caufe of the operations of nature, had they gone on without any order or regularity?
191689061^?
191689061_ 2 But what is Poetry?
191689061am I to blame for this?
191689061and haw mortifying is it to fee them indebted to the fervices of a Belidor, a Boffut, a Clairaut, a Bofcovich?
191689061and w7hat is eafily moving?
191689061and we call it fublime or i?
191689061dern tragedy has aimed at a higher object, by becoming mor?
191689061fenfation or enjoyment?
191689061great velocities which are obferved in the motions of Refiftance''cannon- fhot, or the refiftances which thefe enormous Ajr in velocities occafion?
191689061has alr, ea< iy b «"defcribed under the article Egg; but for the better underftandi ™ by* 7au, h„Ch S? rb rVatT ’ 11 T?
191689061has alr, ea< iy b «"defcribed under the article Egg; but for the better underftandi ™ by* 7au, h„Ch S? rb rVatT ’ 11 T?
191689061he fayS; En deux mots voulez- vous diftinguer et connoitre Le rimeur Dijonnois et le Parifien?
191689061he pays?
191689061how does it happen that fleep depends, in a certain de-""gree, on the will?
191689061iJeu.//r&?
191689061in tragedy muft be in blank verfe?
191689061js{] ie charafterihic phenomenon of mind, or what is v''the dijlinguijhinv quality which brings it into view?
191689061of each fugle particle that wre want to know?
191689061of importance to man: And what objedf can be fo im¬ portant as the knowledge of man himfelf?
191689061or is it formed entirely by one, and brought into aClion by a flimulus from the other •?
191689061or is it poffible to finer out any general rules, founded on the general laws of motion, and rationally deduced from them?
191689061p. 269, 231 Is azote loft?
191689061p?
191689061reckons up his people in the number of thofe who ought to have come to the afiiftance of No- ammon or Diofpoli?.
191689061tjs j p?
191689061to be attended to here is, What is that particular form of ex fence?
191689061vibrating fluid is conne&ed with the phenome- non?
191689061when the inftruments of thy wrath, the pef- tilence, flood, and famine overwhelm at once the righ¬ teous and the guilty?
191689061who does not abhor him as a monfter of T It Y. cruelty, treachery, and ingratitude?
191689061who does not pity him when befet with all the terrors of a preg¬ nant Imagination, fuperftitious temper, and awakened cenfcience?
191689061xii, N?
191689061— vibratus absethere fulgor Cum fonitu venit, et mere omnia vifa repente, Tyrrhenufque tuba?
191689061“ Again, why does an elegant piece of garden- ground make no figure on canvas?
191689061„ f Tl “ of a?
1912538261 he bulb, fays he, is compofed of the remains or rudiments cf the former leaves of the plant;
19125382615 R I[ Englii''hmen, if the convention had determined never to treat with them till there was a reform in the Eng- lifli government?
1912538263S?
191253826940 In forming a political conditution, the vanity of Defedt of French?
191253826<{ What, ” faid he, “ vTas the ftate of our allies when we entered into the confederacy?
191253826? ent ot tion.
191253826About this time, the^farr‘ag?
191253826Ac- 31?
191253826Again, at Lille when we only failed from the extravagant pretenfions of adminiftration?
191253826Againft what are thefe meafures of precaution?
191253826All orders of men crowded to his coach f v B R I[ 4?
191253826And did not every Englifnman, from diminifhed comfort, or from pofitive diftrefs, feel this declaration to be an infult?
191253826And had we not refcued Jamaica from inevitable danger?
191253826And if they had, what did it prove?
191253826And in what manner?
191253826And is Mr Haf> tings alone to be made accountable, during that pe^ riod?
191253826And the queftion was not now be- tween Great Britain and America, but, whether we fttould give up our colonies or our minifters?
191253826Are we for ever, continued Mr Fox, to deprive ourfelves of the benefits of peace, be- caufe France has perpetrated adts of injuftice?
191253826Are we ftill to be deluded and betrayed?
191253826As to the Grand Signior, what was the Ottoman Porte?
191253826B R I[ J41 1 B R I S7 « Petition from the Britain, eonftxtutionally?
191253826B R.1 to all fenting affembly where more than five befide the family wTere prefent) was fined c5?.
191253826BUPHONIA( from/Sy?
191253826Brabant is the fine qua non: Is it gained?
191253826But fince that eventful period could we not have negotiated better very often, for inftance, af¬ ter the furrender of Valenciennes?
191253826But he would alk, was it, after all, fuch an infult to an Englifhman, to alk him to fell his invaluable franchife?
191253826But if animals are not mere machines, what are they?
191253826But if this was the cafe, to what purpofe did public men hold converfations, fince they were afterwards to deny or forget what paffed?
191253826But on what military authority did the miniitry prefume to think that New York was tenible?
191253826But was the inference to be drawn from thefe con- fiderations, that we ought in no cafe to treat with Bo¬ naparte?
191253826But were the circumftances of this peace fuch as jufti- fied our exultations on former occafions?
191253826But what other precedents exifted?
191253826By that think of the horrible exceffes of miferies undergone means I can eafily conceive, on the one hand, how the by beads?
191253826Could wre forget what leffons had been given to the world in a few years?
191253826Did it in¬ dicate any extraordinary partiality towards Great Bri¬ tain?
191253826Had a Britilh Ihip been Hopped in thofe feas?
191253826Had it always mani- feded itfelf in the condudt of miniders?
191253826Had the Dutch been well affefted, why did they not declare themfelves?
191253826Had they not fraudulently obtained the reftitution of Porto Ferrajo to the king of Etruria, to fecure it to them- felves?
191253826Had we forgotten their proverbial ambition, and was their reftoration the remedy for evils arifing from fuch a lource?
191253826Have we done that?
191253826Have we not paffed a year, and nothing has been done?
191253826He admitted the petitions in favour of the union j but by what means wTere they obtained?
191253826He afked, “ Is the war — v—^ which for eight years has ravaged the four quarters ofLet^£rom the wmrld to be eternal?
191253826He attacked the new oppofitionifts, who had been fupporters of the former adminiftration, and demanded for what did we go to war?
191253826He began again, Why thefe armaments?
191253826He began, bv alking me if I had any news from England?
191253826He could not hope to remain long concealed Britain, at Titchfield: the queftion wras, what meafure Ihould''""v"** next be embraced?
191253826He demanded, in the name of God, what thefe meet¬ ings and murmurings meant?
191253826He did not believe the finances of France exhaufted; but admitting they were nearly fo, could we hope to ruin them?
191253826He had eftablifhed in his^rnment?
191253826He remarked, that it might be afked of what ufe was difeuffion, now that peace was concluded?
191253826He will not tell us fo: or if he does, to anfwer the purpofe of the hour, will he hold the fame language to our allies?
191253826He wmuld alk whether the advantages of luch a peace preponderated over the difadvantages of the war?
191253826His lordfhip wras afked, whether he meant that the paper ffiould be entered on the journals of the houfe or not*?
191253826How do the profecutors account for this?
191253826How had we fucceeded?
191253826How is it that they do not feel that peace is of the firft: im¬ portance, as well as the higheft glory?
191253826If he were afked, why, after the tranfadlion at Lyons, no remonftrance had been made to France?
191253826If it were Britain, aiked, why did we choofe fuch a period to nego- v tiate?
191253826If the reiteration of mon¬ archy was not the objedd, what was it?
191253826Ifagog?
191253826In Africa, the ifland of Goree was reftored to France; and the river Senegal, with all its fort?
191253826In fH the B U P[ 794 1 BUR? 5uoy tlie harbour of Alexandria in Egypt, every Hiip is li.
191253826In fuch a pofitxon of things, wrould it be wife to truft^ Britain, the moderation w’hich the noble lord had fo highly ex-* tolled?
191253826In his converfation with Sheldon, he afked who was in chief confidence with the king?
191253826In the prefent dif- pute the principal queftion wjas, Whether the king and parliament, when united, were to be obeyed or refift- ed?
191253826It might be afked, if thofe who had been guilty of fuch atrocities ought to go unpunilhed?
191253826It was an infult to the people; for what had the per¬ fon raifed to the peerage done to merit honours fupe- rior to his fellow- citizens?
191253826Miferable beings as we are, do w^e imagine that the arm of fldh is wranted to aflift and enforce the will of the Almighty?
191253826Mr Fox, who was abfent during MrS.8?
191253826No other refting port was open to us ex¬ cept the Brazils; and who was to enfure us conftant accefs there in a feafon of hoftilities?
191253826Now let us examine this condition of peace in two points of view?
191253826On the contrary, is it not more than, probable that the campaign in the Weft Indies muft; have terminated in the lofs of Jamaica?
191253826On the morning of that day his fervant came into his bed- chamber, and alked him what fort of a night he had had?
191253826On the other hand, what were the commercial refources of France?
191253826One of the la¬ dies in waiting afked her what fixe fawT there more than ufual?
191253826Parliament was diffblved on the?, oth 1027 May* an^ nev^ eleftions immediately took place.
191253826That we and all the powers of Europe had reafon to dread the madnefs of the French, Mr Sheridan agreed; but was this difficult to be accounted for?
191253826The ac- t(?
191253826The affocia- tion affumed the popular title of the friends of the f> eo-/ ■/?
191253826The duk- of Brunfwick alfo iffued a manifef- wkk ’s ma t ° ’ OWT1 name » on 2 7th ° f Juty?
191253826The motion was carried, on a divifion of 232 t0 Refohation?
191253826Then we are to refcue Holland: Is that accomplifhed?
191253826Therefore, if I can elude all thefe confequences; any other creature that amufes us?
191253826They alfo made prize 4?
191253826They are inclofure?
191253826They had placed one Moyer in the chair by the time that the colonel had arrived; add he being afked by the colonel, What they did there?
191253826They publicly alked the queen ’s fervants, whither they had conveyed her?
191253826This They again was the laft triumph of the popular party; their next? et.
191253826This was moft true; but what relation had thefe to England?
191253826To what purpofe was folemn nonfenfe to be revived?
191253826Under all thefe circumftances of his perfonal cha¬ racter, and his newly acquired power, what fecurity had he for retaining that power but the fword?
191253826Upon this occafion, Mr Pitt fupported that fide ofMr Pitt, the queftion which had previoufly received, in a very^0,0?
191253826Upon what hypothefis can we account for a degree of forefight and penetration fuch as this?
191253826Upon what other ground did he approve of our late interference?
191253826Was Bonaparte now''prepared to fign a ge¬ neral peace?
191253826Was he connected with the foil or with the habits, the affeCtions or the prejudices of the country?
191253826Was it a right which every in¬ dividual poffeiTes, of affifting thofe whom he fees op- prefled by unjuit force?
191253826Was it defirable in itl''elf?
191253826Was it in the power of high duties to pre¬ vent the introduftion of them at our tables?
191253826Was it nowr tranquil?
191253826Was it probable, that France ftiould poflefs the capital to make this pur- chafe, without which, the ifland would be of little value?
191253826Was it reafonable to fup- pofe that he would admit, that the guilt of the ag- greffion lay with France?
191253826Was it then a ferious evil, to admit their wines on eafier terms?
191253826Was it to be obtained by railing at Bonaparte?
191253826Was this a favourable fymptom of her friendly difpofition towards this country?
191253826We had acknowledged the American independence; but what was that but an empty form?
191253826We had ceded Flo¬ rida •, but had we not obtained the iflands of Provi¬ dence and the Bahamas?
191253826We had granted an extent of fifhery on the coaft of Newfoundland j but had we not eftablilhed an exclufive right to the moft valuable banks?
191253826We had reftored St Lucia, and given up To¬ bago j but had we not regained Grenada, Dominica, St Chrilfopher ’s, Nevis, and Montferrat?
191253826We have done our ut- moft to prevent the war; we have urged repeatedly the neceftity of bringing it to a fpeed) termination:.W?
191253826We might fend upon an offenfive fchtme five or fix thoufand men j and what expe&ation could be excited by a force of this kind?
191253826We, who boaft, and not without fome reafon, of the elegance, and extent to which we have carried it, have not outdone them?
191253826Were even the houfe willing to trull minilfers with the profecution of the war, would the minifter declare he could trull the al¬ lies?
191253826Were minifters contending that we ought to wait for a more favour¬ able opportunity of entering into negociation?
191253826Were not thefe treaties replete with articles wholly inappli¬ cable to the prefent political Hate of Europe?
191253826Were we deftitute of hope from the change which had recently taken place in the perfons employed in public offices?
191253826What does the note allow him to u"“''v do?
191253826What garrifon would be able to maintain it?
191253826What good can there be in a monkey ’s being fo very mifehievous, a dog fo full of envy, a cat fo malicious?
191253826What is their ftate now?
191253826What is this but to impute to congrefs by anticipation a violence which common decency forbids us to expeft?
191253826What monfters are thefe in a world originally created for order and juftice to reign in?
191253826What party are we to take?
191253826What reafon could the minifters affign why they had neglefted to improve this lingular advantage, and feemed to fpurn at all ideas of negoci- ation?
191253826What reliance could be placed on the unanimity of the French people?
191253826What their fentences?
191253826Where, faid he, is the man that would repair his houfe in the hurricane feafon?
191253826Whether you ftiall ftay in England, or fly to France?
191253826Whether you ftiall truft the returning zeal of your native fubjefls, or rely on a foreign power?
191253826Which of the two nations had been mod aggrandifed in the courfe of it?
191253826Why did not the duke of York fail at the lame time with General Don?
191253826Why were all our forces fent to one place, and 43,000 men cooped up in a narrow peninfula where but few could aft at a time?
191253826Why were we not at an earlier period entertained by the propofition for a gradual abolition?
191253826Will he anfwer this one quedion didinftly?
191253826Will he fpeak thus to the emperor?
191253826Will he fpeak thus to the king of Pruffia?
191253826Will he meet the matter fairly?
191253826Will the Englifh republicans fuffer it?
191253826Would Admiral Pigot have recovered by arms what the minifters had regain¬ ed by negociation?
191253826Would not France, on the breaking out of the war, have ac¬ ceded to any?
191253826Would the not then have relinquilhed Holland, and perhaps abandoned her defigns on the Netherlands?
191253826Wrould not Bonaparte have added thefe?
191253826and the fecond, If we continued the war, what injury could France do to us, or we to France?
191253826more of our woollens, than while reftriCfed to particular ports, and burdened with heavy duties?
191253826nean, had fucceeded in cultivating this branch of com- Brita merce?
191253826or could men be fuppoftd to regard the fituation of this country as in any refpeft unfortu¬ nate when contraded with that of others?
191253826or, Whether wre fhould refort to the meafurcs indifpenfably neceffary to enfure both?
191253826ought we to reft our fecurity upon the pacific difpofition of the prefent rulers of France?
191253826own advantage?
191253826t Though the art of brewing is undoubtedly a part of No fettlec?
191253826was there any immorality in receiving a pecuniary confideration for the ceflion of a valuable benefit to our country?
191253826“ The inhabitants of New Britain are called EJki-? naux. ” See Greenland and Hudson"1 s Bay.
191253826• •''/^''r> 5 • ► A( A).i*.., i.»k\: ImMzmM UiM mm’M&i? 3f^fej* S0ik 4* 1''J X''1 k ty''''&# ■ ■:* ■ i.
191689060Would he deny his letter? — I never got him. 191689060 ), St Peter alked him, how often they muft forgive, and whe-: her it was fufficient to pardon an offender feven times? 191689060 ), he alked St Philip, only to prove him, whence bread might be bought for fuch a multitude of people? 191689060 * Then Jefus held him up, and faid, O man of little faith, why was you afraid? 191689060 , 1 3 JJ, J, S? 191689060 1 5 35 5 a 3 3,5 f ar.3.31? 191689060 1 he only domeftic fervice they do? s to plough their little Spot of land, which is Sowed- by the wife. 191689060 13 3 i s YA-a^rri T? 191689060 2, xi, is compounded of y;,*?,^5. 191689060 38. let AD be the perfpeftive breadth of the Fig- 3? 191689060 3? 191689060 3? 191689060 7 xg Tii? 191689060 The eunuch replied, How fhould I underftand, except fomebody explain it to me? 191689060 The genitive always ends in which ending is formed by inferting# between the radical word and?. 191689060 The great crime of the unfor n? J a 1? athenr! 191689060 The great crime of the unfor n? J a 1? athenr! 191689060 The re¬ gent PEE[ 8? 191689060 The two armies no fooner A d^ came in fight of each other, but they engagedwithbatttebe?
191689060Thefe altars, cal¬ led Ar?
191689060Then the gaoler entering and finding all the pnfoners there, lie brought out Paul and Silas from this place, alking them whathe mull do to be laved?
191689060Then thofe that heard him were touched with com¬ punction, and afked the apoftles, Brethren, what( hall we do?
191689060Then we will have contracted AsyS, Asysi?, Ajy.l, XiyoZftty, Asysm, Xtyvn.
191689060They followed his ad- of ten vice, and, under the conduft of Clearchus, began their thoui''anfl U march, Greek?
191689060They then thought it advifeable to retire to their infantry?
191689060This laft kind of indi¬ vidual is denominated tw
191689060This officer was called HvAev?
191689060Thus, f| fignifies ufed, from; as, Ex A/ o?
191689060Verbs in the Ruffian language are comprehended under two Yeihs?
191689060Was there no refiftance, no commotion among the people? ” “ Not in the lead, my lord.
191689060Was’t not unjuft to ravifh hence her breath, And in life ’s Head to leave us nought but death?
191689060We found fire- brands in different places, which convinced us there had been people, and we fup-?
191689060We thall not now refume the arguments then collected in fupport of that podtion} but proceed to invedigate the charadler 6?
191689060What fay’ft thou, boy?
191689060What fincere and honelk mind can bear this?
191689060What have the phi- lofophers of all ages been employed about but the difco- very of the caufes of thofe changes that are incefiijntly going on?
191689060What will be the grief of the Countefs Levolde who attends on her?
191689060What will the mother of the king of Pruflia fay?
191689060When alphabetical letters were invented, if indeed they were a human invention, they were antecedent to the phabetic?!
191689060When fliall the friendly dawning rays Guide me to pleafures once poffeft; And breezy gales, o’er peaceful feas, Waft to fome port of endlefs reft?
191689060When he was alked, on occafion of this work, why there were fo many witches in the north?
191689060When that my care could not withhold thy riots, llVhat wilt thou do when riot is thy care?
191689060Whence did''the hitlorian derive his information?
191689060Whence this anomaly?
191689060Where are my friends?
191689060Where then fhall we apply for a folution of this intricate prob¬ lem, which feems to penetrate deep into human nature?
191689060Where then is our refource?
191689060Where then is the inftrudior to be found that can unveil this fee ret connexion?
191689060Which of the events of this train therefore is the caufe of the fenfation?
191689060Which of thefe would you appoint to the rack, the axe, or the halter?
191689060Who comes next?
191689060Who next, my friends?
191689060Whom had they to deliver up, fave parents, brothers, kindred, or valiant neigh¬ bours, who had fo often expofed their lives in their de¬ fence?
191689060Why?
191689060Will he be kind?
191689060Without the points then, how are we to know the diftindlion?
191689060Would he not Humble?
191689060Would the greateft misfortune that can befal a virtuous man be to you a confolation?
191689060_ Having divided this fquare into the given number of lelfer fquares, draw the two diagonals A a?
191689060and will he not forfake me?
191689060at Bombay a round tower, covered with planks of wood, Perfee?, on which the Perfees lay out their dead bodies.
191689060be the vertical lii>?
191689060belonging to the pentandria clafs} and in the natural Paftmrca method ranking under the 45th order, Umbellate?.
191689060ed for neuter gender, the letter 1 or d was changed into T?
191689060fay you, are riches, dignity, and power, referved for fuch wretches as this?
191689060ftance, can we at the fame moment be thinking of the w r"— parts of a man and the parts of a horfe?
191689060genitive Avxztos, Avsjkt?.
191689060how then?
191689060how will you fet about it?
191689060if plants owe their Colour to phlogifton imparted by the fun ’s rays, why do the fun ’s rays deftroy vegetable colours that are expofed to them?
191689060if virtue has any{ hare in the aft of ennobling. ”"■''y “ Were they delivered peaceably,( fays Edward)?
191689060in lj.l proconfular Afia, which contained lonfe?
191689060is this a dream?
191689060is this a vifion?
191689060nay, do I live?
191689060on the table, ‘ This will( faid he) can''never be finiftied. ’ I afked him, whether he would put his name to what was already written?
191689060or if they were, whether they be as old as Mofes, or were invented by Ezra, or by the Mafforites( t)?
191689060or is it fuppofable that a Being of infinite, vvifdom would excite us to adions fo extravagantly fooliffi?
191689060or mufi: I die, without being either heard or condemned?
191689060s^ Doth he hear it?
191689060tell me, gentle friend, How went he under him?
191689060thefe things had happened, if they had not happened?
191689060this city, faying, Have not the houfes been built a long time?
191689060vH? ” ’ lb* Rome, under the confuls Caefo Fabius and T. Vir- aml|or ginius, had feveral wars to fuftain, lefs dangerous than lin''s Rom.
191689060what are you to declare r what am I to hear?
191689060when the moon was at the full?
191689060who would prefer a piece of coloured glafs to a dia¬ mond?
191689060would he not fall down,( Since pride mull have a fall), and break the neck Of that proud man that did ufurp his back?
191689060x?
191689060‘ That( replied he) I elfeem as a favour; but have you ffcen the fentence?
191689060’ ixr^ivci rxi ia- MT&i> ixu?
191689060“ 3^ 7?
191689060“ No, no,( faid his zealous compauion), A/ ifir/?, Godfecond!
191689060“ Saul, Saul, why perfecuteft thou me? ” It was Jefus Chrift that( poke to him.
191689060“ What is Honour?
191689060“ do I fleep?
191689060■ But what need words To paint its power?
191320558!< 1S nor’/’lu are broken tor the general good, is he to be guided byhisfehemes his own vifionary Ichemesof utility?
191320558& c. tent of country? ” And as die promifes that he fhould f 451 1 P R O* 3 Promife to Abraham.
191320558''Prunes, Pronin?
191320558''— Maurice, who had fo bafely be- r- a^cn l31''"trayed him, was now declared elector of Saxony 5 and ° nU?"
191320558( prjjng?
191320558,< ■> g/"•r?
191320558//„/?-a/,)-''/./A///?
1913205581( a) Fora detailed account of this Angular mafs of coal, the reader is referred to the Appendix to Williams?
19132055810 When a promife is made, the particular circumftances Error''e.cm?
191320558194 1?
1913205584?
191320558530?
1913205588z? ts utility.
191320558?
191320558? ’''! 31, Plilburghaufen and the prince de Soubife.
191320558?.
191320558A fmall piece upon the quedion, Whether pleafure makes our prefent happinefs?
191320558A pradlice, it is imagined, too deftruftive of the intended precifion of thefe typical notice?
191320558An angle contained by any two circles of the fphere is equal to the angle formed by the radii of their projedfion?
191320558And as to the courfe of nature, it may juftly be atked, is the force of gravitation to be fufpended till a good man pafs by an infirm building?
191320558And for how many ages have the better paits of that country lain under the dominion fird of the Romans, then of the Saracens, and now of the lurks?
191320558And if they allow the relurreRion of ChriR, what do they gain by difcrediting the prophets?
191320558And if they have themfelves fuch a principle, how is it that this principle is multiplied, and is found in every feparate piece?
191320558And ihould it be aiked, in what place does he referve it till the refurrection?
191320558And this is not peculiar to hydraulics,? n''his fu,?"
191320558And this is not peculiar to hydraulics,? n''his fu,?"
191320558Apparatus, This mixture, when rubbed too much, will be too&? 5rFire/ ierCe ’ and h.ardly fh ° W any^ars ’ and ’ on l''ne contrary, works.
191320558Are not ftill many fpecimens of this reafoning preferved in the ancient poets?
191320558Are not thefe mathematical feiences?
191320558As for extorted promifes, it is curious to obferve how this queftion ftrould always be ftarted, whether or not they ought to be kept?
191320558B E S t? 68] RES Refurrec- Of the Sto ics.
191320558But can any thing be more abfurd?
191320558But how does this quantity X* yEt% nify a time?
191320558But how mull we difeover this different manner?
191320558But is the fpirit of Chriftianity equally pure and benignant?
191320558But were the hero and the wit in thofe deplorable cir- cumftances excluded from the human fpecies, and clafled between men and brutes?
191320558But who has ever attempted to verify this by experi¬ ment?
191320558By this kind of patch- work they make up a trajectory and motion which cor- rsfponds, in fame tolerable degree, with what?
191320558Could its in¬ fluence be favourable to virtue?
191320558Does it really merit to have triumphed over both the theifm of the Jews and the polytheifm of the heathens?
191320558Fi/ y?
191320558Find¬ ing it impoffible for him to carry on a defenfive war, he marched towards Silefia with fuch aftonilhing ra- 3?
191320558For let fg Jin be air ordinate very near to BD^ K j and let Jin cut the curve in n, and the ordinate KI irt q; then we have K?
191320558For what is elafficity but a preffure l and how ihali it be produced?
191320558For wilt thou, fays the Eligheft, difannul my judgement?
191320558He returned t
191320558He* SimpHc- alks*, “ Whether God may be called the author of lin,''■''/(F''2 p^iSd kecauk he permits the foul to ufc her liberty?
191320558Hot- walls, Flued Fits, ann Hflr- hens?
191320558How much A ex¬ ceeds B, or B exceeds A?
191320558How powerfulfenes of was the influence of the facramcntum adminiltered to^i''c''the foldiers when they enlifted in the fervice of their country?
191320558I.64 I.65 1-i1 4-69 I.91 5-91 i?
191320558I?
191320558If F/?
191320558If a cup of cold water given in charity be entitled to a reward, how much more fuch an action as this?
191320558If the world is condudled by a benevolent provi- introduc^ence5^ow cnme evil to be introduced into it?
191320558If this was not the cafe, could the forger of the books have perfuaded the people that it really was fo?
191320558In ftiort, may we expeft miracles?
191320558In the autumn of 17^ 5 wen*- Bruihd3?
191320558In the mean time, the preffure of the furrounding water forces it into the working barrel?
191320558In what time will the body acquire the velocity 323,62?
191320558In what wickednefs, ignorance, barbarity, Havery, and mifery, live mod of its inhabitants?
191320558Is its influ¬ ence equally beneficial and more diffufive than that of Judaifm?
191320558Is not the whole land before thee?
191320558Is this wonderful reproduction of parts only a natural confe- quence of the laws of motion?
191320558It is a ihim-b tnWheU mXp ° fe?
191320558It is here given for the velocity which is very ufual in military fervice, and its ufe is to affift us in dire Clin?
191320558It is one of the moll ancient, celebrated, and largeft places in the kingdom, had an archbifhop ’s fee?
191320558It is, that if x and v are any two** A?
191320558It isn?
191320558Join OF, OG, and make the angle mCH equal to hOG, and the arch? n H of the primitive will be the meafure of the arch DE of the inclined circle RDS.
191320558Let any perfon perufe the publithed regifters of experiment?
191320558Let p exprefs the ratio of y to a?, that is, let/> be=:?/ • •## 4-, ox p x~ y.
191320558Let p exprefs the ratio of y to a?, that is, let/> be=:?/ • •## 4-, ox p x~ y.
191320558Louis the Fioman fucceeded his brother-?
191320558Meafuring What is nleafuring?
191320558Meal- Materia!s?
191320558Might not this army of fatyrs have been only a race of moun¬ taineers, whom Rama, if fuch a monarch ever exifted, had civilized?
191320558Moreover, the times in which the fame ve-^^?
191320558Mr Buat there¬ fore thought it very neceffary to examine the adfion of the water on the hinder part of a body by the fame? S method.
191320558One, which was probably fuggefted by the M«v «?
191320558Or how many times, or parts of a time, A contains B, or B contains A?
191320558Or it may be confldered merely as a number, multiply¬ ing a?, fo as to make\l~ y.
191320558REV[? 86] REV the payment 01 the whole annuity to the crown.
191320558Required the terminal velocity of this ball?
191320558Required the whole height to which it will rife?
191320558Rocket cafes, from the fmalleft to four or fix pounds, Mcihod c?
191320558Should covet lazy limbs and mortal breath?
191320558Since the abfciflTae of the hyperbola are as the times, and the ordinates are as the Velocities, the areas will be as the fpaces defcribed, and AC k*?
191320558T4 FretlericTir, obtains the title of kin?
191320558Tacitus had H already obferved this, in his treatife De? noribus Germa- u^te c''.
191320558The coal¬ mines of Hurlet have for a long time afforded the ma¬ terials for a copperas manufa£lory on a fmall fcale} and one[/I?
191320558The compaftum, or Tartarian rhubarb, hath a large, fleffiy, branched root?
191320558The ferew S is pre¬ vented from unturning, by tightening the finger- I »?
191320558The operation of this pump is therefore two- fold, is twafolt?, fucking and forcing.
191320558The queftion is rather, What have, d''the Scriptures determined on the fubjeft?
191320558The queftion now is, whether the refiftance will be increafed by an increafe of external preffure?
191320558The refiftances by experi¬ ment were 15^ and 26\, and the theory required 20?
191320558The word is formed from the Latin quo- ties; q. d. How often is fuch a number contained in fuch another?
191320558The „ 3 U learned U1,C- S?
191320558There is not here fo much as a word concerning the body j and therefore it was afked with what bodies are the dead to be raifed?
191320558This paper affords fome light with regard to the progrefs of his fpecul?
191320558This would not V 2
191320558Thus fuppofe the body projected with the terminal velocity, or V=:w; then?/:=—^=..
191320558To a£t in this inftance, muff it arife from a full Fmaller impulfe?
191320558To make ufe of this table, divide the initial velocity by the terminal velocity?/, and look for the quotient in the firft column.
191320558Upon what principle is the lex talionis founded, other than to make the punilhment refemble the mifehief?
191320558We are not corftpa- Refiftanf?
191320558What are we to conclude from ail this?
191320558What if any of thefe particles Ihould enter a vegetable, compofe its^ fruit, and be eaten by a man, woman, or a child?
191320558What is the metaphyfleian to think of thefe pheno¬ mena, or what conclufion is he to draw from them ic- fpedfing the mind?
191320558What is „ s the force which can withftand a double impulfe?
191320558What then is the vidfory over death and the grave?
191320558What weight is able to produce this effed?
191320558When a writer thus deviates fo far from the path of reafon, it is natural to alk, what was the ignis fatuus that milled him?
191320558When you have rolled a cafe, pafte down the edge and ti?
191320558Whence arifes this difference?
191320558Whence came that cohefion of particles that hindered that wall to efcape at the fides?
191320558Whence then does the unborn infant derive its mind?
191320558Where, breach of A private faith promotes his- own inlereft, ought he alone to de- ’ “ dwidual cide on the validity of his promife?
191320558Whereabouts?
191320558Whether ought fimilar emotions to fucceed each other, or diffimilar?
191320558Who knows the velocity of the bail in the experiment?
191320558Who will fay, that the motive is rational which inclines one to cheriffi a paffion which confcience difapproves?
191320558Why fhould I throw away fo much time and painful attention upon a thing of fo little ufe?
191320558Wilt thou condemn me that thou may- eft be righteous?
191320558With an accurate theory?
191320558Yet the anfwer( if we had a meafure)* Would be as eafy as to the queftion, How many guineas did you win at cards?
191320558You mult ftill have recourfe to a new figure, and betake yourfelves to the fecond death; though, after all, where is your grave?
191320558^ public, and ftiall the community fubmit to his decifions without fo much as putting the queftion, Who hath made thee a ruler over us?
191320558^ yefterday?
191320558and another queftion ftrould feldom be thought of, whether or not they ought lS to be made?
191320558and how came they, in the name of wonder, to be brought as an evidence for thofe tranfac- tions that happened at the time w''hen they were afleep?
191320558and is it not thus that Achilles f reafons after imagining that he faw the ghoft of his friend Patroelus?
191320558and wffiat choice could there be, if the mind were conftantlv re- llrained to one fide of every alternative?
191320558and, above all, to examine, What particular religion is beft calculated to produce a happy influence on human life?
191320558as alfo the marks of interrogation(?)
191320558be — and BErr''y; then KD — zz- f-''1 ’?
191320558can it be that fouls fublime Return to vifit our terreftrial clime?
191320558conclude that Chriftianity is infinitely fuperior to the fuperftitions of Paganifm?
191320558io From thefe phenomena, which have been fo common Probable in all countries and in all ages, what would mankind inferences naturally infer?
191320558ioj Spiral wheels, are only double horizontal wheels, and Spiral made thus: The nave muft be about fix inches long, wlieel?
191320558mob''epre-^Von t^le whole, then, may We not, from the particu- ierred to all\ar?
191320558of any value, from one to three, it is no w''onder that compenfations of errors ftiould produce a coincidence; but where is the coincidence?
191320558olibanum or frankincenfe in drops 4 °''''i*?
191320558or are they, like more perfeCt animals, a fort of compound, the fprings of whofe motions are aCtuated or regulated by a fort, of foul?
191320558or how much land have you bought?
191320558or, which is the fame thing, whe¬ ther this reproduftion will or will not take place in what¬ ever part the worm is cut?
191320558p. 44- « ccvoy.oicc xd\c& fiovcts ras?
191320558r p 7?
191320558themfelves between men and brutes?
191320558times as high, againft the uniform aftion of gravity j produftion by the operation of a natural caufe?
191320558triple of fuch a fum, am I obliged to grant his demands?
191320558truftee for the public without any delegated power?
191320558which is moving parallel to itfelf in the direction and with the velocity DF: It is required to determine the impulfe?
191320558x774 i?7i 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 26 24 20 25 20 26 i?
191320558{ hall he that contendeth with the Al¬ mighty inftruft him?
191320558’^ A queltion that has much oftener agitated the minds With whit of men is, with what fort of bodies are the dead to be bodies they raifed?
191320558“ In every thing dramatic, collo¬ quial, 0r of Ample narrative, let your modulation be the fame?
191320558“ Sobriety or temperance is nothing but the forbear¬ ance of pleafure*, and if pleafure was not followed by pain, wrho would forbear it?
191320558“ Vegetable?, even in flower, do not appear in the lead macerated, which has formerly happened from on¬ ly{ bowers of land.
191320561( a?
191320561( fl- f a?
191320561( i ot — j-), therefore 2 v—^-*—s, and fince it has been fliewn that fvu= j)+ therefor,/ ’= s — i*+con/?.
191320561( y- f-^''O?
191320561( «+ «)= H r-4-& C. a 2 a?
191320561(^4-»4 — » —?
191320561* a?
191320561* a?
191320561*+? «*+**-1-/3*)7(( x+ xy+py where q denotes fome integer number.
191320561+''~ X12 st XP?''
191320561, ThlS d?es 110 t appear fo dangerous amon?
191320561, arch PP — limit or ■ now the limit of the angle PQD being evidently a right angle, we have.. PF V(PQl+&?
191320561, r^, duce this lafl to that of x7n.r x,")?
191320561, „"Inverf?
191320561-''m — a V( I — V1)[ FLU Ax^x+X xm+”x+C xm+2nx+& c. and taking the fluent of each term by$ roi,/?, • A.
191320561-}-2 a:2 V/ ZZ2—a?2 A?
191320561// rr/.t S*''////?
1913205611 A A?
19132056110 determine its fluent, the formula «=/''Ma:+Y gives us »= v/(>y+*1+*.?
191320561207 The queilion of feeding the cattle tied up, or loofeProPr.iet? ’ in the yards, in winter, has not been yet decided.
1913205613 o3 4''con/?.
19132056137r) y+J?
191320561479 As the eruption of the cow- pox difappears in a few Originate?
1913205616 convalefcent ftate?
1913205617* •^''or wa^P^7?
19132056174^''/^ y/^ 7''Jy^^''P’j*''?''
191320561:;''4''rx y?
191320561
191320561?
191320561?
191320561? c7 Of fecretisn His fecretions and execretions are either unufually co- tjQn pious.
191320561? iulto Fumat adore.
191320561AH new grounds produce a flrong crop of flax, and pretty free o?
191320561After the toils of battle to repofe Your weary’d virtue?
191320561Alkaline lixivia, in fome degree, produce fimilar effedls? o putrefa&ion.
191320561And what avail the thoughts of former joys?
191320561Are animal filaments tubular, and the colouring atoms received within them?
191320561Are not forae of thefe appearances peculiar to the hepatic rot?
191320561Are their eyes red, watery, and hot?
191320561Are their noftrils dry, or does there ooze from them a mucous matter?
191320561Are there any puftules or tumours on the furface of the body?
191320561Are there to be obferved any little convulfions below the Ikin, efpecially about the neck?
191320561Are vegetable filaments folid, and the colour depofited on the furface?
191320561At what periods do thefe feveral circumftances take place?
191320561Biceps in human anatomy, i, k,/,? n, n, fig.
191320561But is there any pre- difpofing caufe?
191320561But thou danded alone, my father 3 and who can equal the king of Morven? ” See OssiAN.
191320561Can they the canker- worm of care deftroy, Or brighten fortune ’s difcontcnted lour?
191320561Can we fuppofe that filh gives occafion to fuch a coagulum as runnet?
191320561Did the difeafe come on with{ hivering, with coldnefs of the hcwms and ears, and with the lofs of ap¬ petite?
191320561Did the heat come on foon after the cold fit, or was it not preceded by a cold fit?
191320561Do the animals continue lying, without being able to raife themfelves on their legs?
191320561Do the flanks heave or not?
191320561Does he chew the cud?
191320561Does the animal feem much difordered, or does he refufe every fort of drink?
191320561Does the animal feem to feel any great pain when he is touched in the flanks, or the belly, on the fpine, or on the rump?
191320561Does the diforder come on at any particular times?
191320561FAR;RJE R Y Plate?
191320561Fa ft in?, Faftoif.
191320561For where Ihall we find the perfon who hath received from any one benefits fo great or fo many, as children from their parents?
191320561God demanded of him, who it wras that told him he was naked j and whether he had difobeyed Ins com¬ mand, in eating the forbidden fruit?
191320561Has he a frequent difcharge of urine, and what is the colour and confidence of it?
191320561Has he been obferved to pafs any worms?
191320561Has he ever had the diforder before?
191320561Has the diftemper been annouriced by any pre¬ vious fyniptoms; and what were they?
191320561He died in 172?.
191320561He is now to be formally fummoned to appear before them ■, and he has warning given him, at leaft 10 days beiore ths?
191320561He was chofen a fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1749?
191320561Hence it appears that in afligning the fluent of X x, wm only determine the change that takes place in the va¬ lue of''the funaiony''X x while a?
191320561Her father then aiked her why ihe would not make fome figns when ihe wanted a drink?
191320561How dare thy joints forget To pay their awful duty to our prefence?
191320561How did the diforder begin?
191320561How does the diftemper terminate; what are the fymptoms that announce a healthy termination, and what are thofe which precede death?
191320561How does your Graee?
191320561I-\-b, and aJ~( i?
191320561IV/ iat are the effects of variety in food?
191320561If he has, What was ufually given him on thele occa- fions?
191320561If however we affume~~o, fo that the two values are, x''2* 3 2,3+!- —+& c. y t?
191320561In 1703* appeared the Inconftant, or the Way to Win him: in i704> a farce called the Stagc- coach in 1705, The Twin Rival?
191320561In FIX t^''e y«ar 1174?
191320561In the article Chemistry, we have pre¬ pared abundant matter for the reader to make himfelf acquainted with the elements of that admirable fci- 42?
191320561In the autumnal feafon, when there a tendency to dyfentery, if it is obferve^t a ea f^its brings it on, it is rathe?
191320561In the firft place we have 0=^4-** — « —*?
191320561In the year 1745?
191320561In what ftate after death are found the ftomachs, the bowels, the liver, the fpleen, the lungs, the heart, and the brain?
191320561In what proportion animal and vegetable food ought to be mixed?
191320561In?
191320561Inftead of finding the fluent of dm an X=, x — ™, u?
191320561Is it neceffary and al¬ lowable, or univerfally hurtful?
191320561Is the animal fatigued with a cough, and is this cough very frequent?
191320561Is the hair fmooth or flaring, or does it eafily come off when the Ikin is curried, or even when the body is rubbed with a wifp of ftraw?
191320561Isrtheir throat inflamed, or are there on it any aphthous cruds?
191320561It is, therefore, of importance not to deftroy the ligai»ent of joints with th?
191320561It may however, be fimplified in its form, by obferving, that fince ■ x>> 0 t 2 2iz — n z t* nz i — nz+ z?
191320561It muft, how¬ ever, be admitted, y?
191320561Let denote the fame as in J 137, then, as the fine of 30 degrees, or of-J w, is 4?
191320561Let this value of A be fubftituted for A?
191320561Let us Arft fuppofe that «, a fundfion of a varia¬ ble quantity a?, is equal to the fum of v and w, two other fundtions of x.
191320561Let us fake for the fecond example^ Bv employing the latter trans-- VTA+Bv- C^) y^; 8 of which tb?
191320561Let us now confider the fluxions of geometrical o?
191320561Let us put Z, then the fuccef- five fluxions of that part are Z — Ba;—2 C( a;-pa)a;—3 D( a?-pa)* a?
191320561N ° 204 521 322 523 31?
191320561Of a friend, or at the public market?
191320561Of what nature is the fodder and the grain that are given to the cattle within doors?
191320561Of what quality are the waters which the cattle ufually drink, and of what dimenfions are the refer- voirs that contain them?
191320561Or has there on the contrary been any great drought, and how long has it continued?
191320561Or, does not their different fufceptibility of colour de¬ pend rather on the different intrinfic properties of the two?
191320561Part II,+& c. • X garithmbyy, then yzz — j —($ 57.)?
191320561Pie died in 1457?
191320561Plate CCXVTI y''S/4; T4/?
191320561Quis defiderio fit pudor aut modus Tam chari capitis?
191320561RatiJboney 1753?
191320561S''*^ 7/>, f^/Z.-t''y*\ 77?
191320561Stood the ffrength of car- borne Ofcar?
191320561Suppofethatyrz(av”-f- b)mxn—1 x. Byputtingas before ex''’’-J-^zris, we have — ‘ xrrzz, and xn—1^~ —?
191320561The F O E[? 8 FTying ISridge I!
191320561The firft term of the feries is the original function 7/, or a? ”, itfelf, or it is what the function be¬ comes upon the fuppofttion that/^no.
191320561The hoof of the horfe frequently becomes lengthen- Oontradte^ ed, and contrafted at the heel?
191320561The number which we have denoted by
191320561The point ’ v le. Centl?
191320561They have but fallen be¬ fore us 3 for, one day w*e mud fall.—Why dod thou build the hall, fon of the winged days?
191320561This laft feries will be convergent when x is greater than r?, and at the fame time and n~ pF\.
191320561This value of?
191320561To find the fluent of x we may affume x then x — iz, and^ P x-\-a) ‘ M%( x-{- «) M\—p{ P — P)( x+a)?''
191320561To find the value of the conftant quantity we have only to make at= o, for then the equation becomes ba¬ con/?.
191320561Uumque virent genua?
191320561W as he bought of a horfe- dealer, or of a private per- fon?
191320561We might have deduced the value of B from B X C A?
191320561What are we then to think of thefe?
191320561What circumftances feem to have rendered it ne- ceflary for the cattle to work?
191320561What comfort bring they in the adverfe hour?
191320561What fenfible effedls have thefe remedies pro¬ duced?
191320561What has been the feafon for getting in the hay, and for harveft: and what effect does the feafon feem to have had on the hay and other fodder?
191320561What is the fituation of the country in which the epidemic appears, and what is the nature of the foil?
191320561What is the quality of the pafturage, and what are the plants which moft: conftantly grow in the paf- tures?
191320561What remedies have been adminiftered to the dif- eafed beaft?
191320561When the fundion to be decompofed into fac¬ tors is y''+ the formula ‘( 2w+ iV 1//-( 2wz-(-i)'',r?/=cof.
191320561When they are lying, is their head low, or how — v — do they hold it?
191320561Whence, then, has this hidden and great increafe of heat arifen?
191320561Why fliould not the longitudinal fibres of the flax, before they be fpun into yarn, be made not only as Jine but as clean as poflible?
191320561Why had not Odian the drength of thy foul?
191320561Why peep your coward fwords half out their Ihells?
191320561With the beauties which enliven a garden are every¬ where intermixed many properties of a farm: both the lawns are paftured; and the lowing?
191320561X,& c. Therefore, fubftituting as x''U J before thefe values in the general formula?/=«+-v- A+ x See.
191320561[ j- l rS/ i&f/ H r?.
191320561^1?
191320561^v l1—x) J s> then Xa?
191320561a white fat watpt* ac t?
191320561a?
191320561a?, we find( by\ 57.)
191320561and proceeding by the rules of$ 37 and laft), 71?
191320561and therefore,?
191320561anq was?
191320561are added great proHration of vol# 1L Itrengthj& munition rosy ix?
191320561barfait tiarechal?
191320561be now fubftituted for x ”, nxn~’t, X x% 71{? i—1) x",& c. refpeiftively, in the feries for u\ and we have,.
191320561e/>* mx 2& Co+& c 2r and therefore Xm bm —(/>—q)"2+{ p%—''7*)^+^ ■ C, a„d£=^=(p_?
191320561f X* 2X f*x*''«=aX{r< rw —? — T-I- con/ l.
191320561have C*+P^ Sxm- n^+bx)PA-1 n 1 fucceeded in reducing toj''• 1 0 tlllS( P+l)ni?
191320561hence Mrr- 2x-\-y d — J- A?
191320561i it is natural to afk, how it comes to pafs, that while we fee myriads of the progeny of thefe winged jnfe&s in water, we never fee the ° mfelves?
191320561is allowed for each barrel ufed by the foreign or Irilh exportation of the filh 5 but there is a duty of I s. per band for home eo»fumption?
191320561j+( A"x+ B'''') Q*+ 2xX+xl+P*)?.,...
191320561jo8 no 497? 8l, d. ib.
191320561m+n''1.2 q1 az P(/> —?
191320561n c( KA’-j- L)A?
191320561of Farriery, ’?
191320561part to w^ch they do not belong?
191320561particularly in giving the bark, by way clyfter, in Difeafe?.
191320561refer it?
191320561roafted?
191320561t''1?
191320561to I inftead of a?
191320561v BT~ — y — •——= y d-}-^ col.u_ PBxJBQ_> — EB?
191320561w* foim* Supp0^ next tlle^nftIon of X to be of this( A** 4-B* 0-f C* O''.f& c.)*?
191320561we have a x and V* therefore''^y- ax, and 3 but from the equa¬ tion tf — lax — a?
191320561we obtain two fe¬ ries, one of thefe is ’( 72-f2)(«-j-3)"r f,?
191320561what kind of a fluid it was; or whe¬ ther it bears any analogy to thofe with which wre are better acquainted?
191320561x x Hence it appears that whatever be the magnitude of the quantity that expreffes the fluxion of x, the fluxion of 7/ or a?
191320561x\ arc(* “ •=-;+^-= X X1 X* x^.. — — — yd;+& c.-f- co«/?.
191320561| a;2( zz2-J- a;2) a?
191320561“ Did thy beauty laff, O Ryno?
191320561“ It is confident¬ ly alferted, that decoCfions of bitter herbs, with fait, have frequently preferved ffieep from tin?
191320559!, not lark and linnet jointly ling, Their notes bljthe- warbling to falute the fpring?
191320559&-c-?
191320559* PRO[ 3%] PRO Prnccf?.
191320559, fr::>ferr^e?
1913205590 Ifrael, thou haft defrayed thyfelf but in me is thy help: ye will not co?ne unto me that ye may have life: Why will you die, 0 Imife of Ifrael?
1913205591 h. Slander we fhepherds count the vileft wrong: And what wounds forer than an evil tongue?
191320559208]?
1913205592o Upon thefe principles, we can eafily explain all the Scriptural paffages in the New Teftament concerning the purpofe,''xpreffion?}
1913205593. f fpaciou?.
19132055931?
1913205594 Ariobar-? anes Piakes ofF the Mace¬ donian yoke- PON[ i bates, who reigned in the time of Darius Nothus.
1913205594?.
1913205598?
191320559> 1 POLYGAMIA( ttsAv?
191320559?
191320559? 27 Rules for 21.
191320559Again, if the patient can not fwallow, how is he’to be ’ imported?
191320559And again, being afked by the Roman con- ful, flrould the punilhment be remitted, What peace was to be expecied with them?
191320559And is there magic but what dwells in love?
191320559And what, faid fhe, does this bold painter mean?
191320559And-what inticement charm’d thee far away From thy lov’d home, and led thy heart aftray?
191320559Are we condemn’d by Fate ’s unjuft decree, No more our houfes and our homes to fee?
191320559But fuppoling that there did, will ever this account for the generation of lime?
191320559But how, it will be alked by our Englilh readers, are the poor in Scotland really maintained?
191320559But if a heroic verfe in our tongue be not compofed, as in French, of a certain number of fyllables, how is it formed?
191320559But in the mean time the king of? oia''urt.
191320559But it may be afked, if this Anal paufe mud be mark¬ ed neither by an elevation nor by a depreffion of the voice, how is it to be marked at all?
191320559But tell me, Tityrus, what heav’nly pow’r Preferv’d your fortunes in that fatal hour?
191320559But to what purpofe is it to fpeak to dead men, to perfuade the blind to fee, or the lame to run?
191320559But( faid he), if 1 fhould confent and reconduct you to Warfaw, what will be the confe- quence?
191320559By giving a greater Iffc ° f% quantity of manufadlured commodities in exchange for Spence?
191320559Can any good affion be done without it?
191320559Can love itfelf endure?
191320559Co. And can there, Thenot, be a greater ill?
191320559Colin, here the place, whofe pleafant fight From other fliades hath wean’d my wand’ring mind: Tell roe, what wants me here, to work delight?
191320559Did Chritt die for a par¬ ticular portion of the human race, who lhall therefore certainly be faved?
191320559Did we for thefe barbarians plant and fow, On thefe, on thefe, our happy fields bellow?
191320559Do lovers dream, or is my Delia kind?
191320559Do they live together without marriage?
191320559Do thofe who have once received it certainly perfevere and obtain eternal falva- tion?
191320559Does he will or wiffi that all man¬ kind fiiould be faved, and{ hall they not all be faved?
191320559Does there one fmiling hour my youth attend?
191320559Dormir eft un temps perdu; Faut il qu’on s’y livre?
191320559Et tu in tanto furore, Dei mentionem ullam facere audes?
191320559Except in the time of the fair, all the inhabitants of Porto Bello do not a- mount to 3000} half of whom are Indians, Mulattoes?
191320559Fay’d thou thy ancient lyre afide?
191320559From the facility of being multiplied, prints have de- Strvtt''s rived an advantage over paintings by no means inconfi-- D/<5?.
191320559Hath not the tl0!1 potter power over the clay; of the fame lump to make v one veffel unto honour, and another unto di/ honour?
191320559Have not your Portlanders the fame kind of ficklenexS in their attachments that Englifhmen are fubjeft to?
191320559Having laid dowm this prin¬ ciple, the next queftion comes to be, how the money of any nation wras to be increafed?
191320559He determines to give opium: in what form is he to order its admirriftration?
191320559Her morals, too, were in her bofom bred, 1 By great examples daily fed,? • What in the befl of books, her father ’s life flie read.
191320559Here, in look- 65] PON ing over the king ’s manuferipts, he came to difeover Pcntii?,''tiirther con-, quells.
191320559Here, riling bold, the patriot ’s honeft face j There, warriors frowning in hiftoric brafs?
191320559How eafy the tranfttion, at any time, from the draught to the original, from the fliadow to the fubftance?
191320559How is the phyfi- cian to prefenbe a nutritive injeaion?
191320559How often would I have gathered you under my ’ wings, and ye would Jiot?
191320559I hey wrere, how¬ ever, foon difpofed of to Nicholas Bechtermuntze of Altavilla, who, in 1469?
191320559I love at fight: Dr ink’ft thou?
191320559I then afked my landlord at Sidon, fuppofe him a weaver, how many children he has had?
191320559I whom you call’d J/ oi/ r Dear, your Love, fo late, Say, am I now the objefl of your hate?
191320559If a great and civilized nation was led to worlhip the holt of heaven, why Ihould that worlhip be fuppofed to have arifen a- mong favages?
191320559If he knows all things paft, prefent, and future, where is the propriety of our confefiing our fins unto him?
191320559In all other he^ is Certainl?
191320559In living medals fee her wars enroll’d, And vanquifli’d realms fupply recording gold?
191320559In the reign of Louis, to- Ihereditary, wards^^ of tjie I4th centUry?
191320559In the year G S I749?
191320559Inftantly holding council, four of them difappeared, leaving him with the other tine?, who compelled him to wralk on.
191320559Is a gentle di- aphoretic indicated?
191320559Is an emetic required?
191320559Is he to give this large dofe at once, or is he gradually to inereafe it?
191320559Is it likely that Zell, who was^Colonne, German, would have omitted to mention Stralburg, ifl499- it had preceded Mentz m printing?
191320559Is the divine grace certainly and irrefiftibly efficacious in all thole minds to which it is given?
191320559Is the fame quantity of opium as when taken by the mouth, fufficient for a clviler?
191320559Is there one joy fincere, that will not tire?
191320559Is there unrighteoufnefs with God?
191320559It is faid that this animal is apt to be difeafed j but why were not inconveniences felt on that account in Greece?
191320559It is required to determine the path of the body, and all the circumftances of its motion in this path?
191320559It they are certainly forefeen, they mt{/?
191320559Je fuis ne pour les pbifirs} Bien fou qui s’en pafte: Je ne veux pas les choifir 5 Souvent le choix m’embarraffe: Aime t’on?
191320559J’aime foudain; Bois t’on?
191320559Locke claffe?
191320559Lodg’d in the wintry cave with Fate ’s fell fpear fi)?
191320559Lov’ft thou, my friend?
191320559Lyre divine, what daring fpirit Wakes thee now?
191320559Mortals from the gloomy grave, Why ftiould I myfelf deceive, Vainly ftgh, and vainly grieve?
191320559Nor after length of rolling years return?
191320559Of i] e tl argument?
191320559Of the Hate thfe ° l0 g?
191320559Oh when{ hall Britain, confcious of her claim, Stand emulous of Greek and Roman fame?
191320559Or is it age of late bedims my fight?
191320559Or tears, which love and pity Hied, That mourn beneath the gliding fail?
191320559Or( hall w''e mount again the rural throne, And rule the country, kingdoms once our own?
191320559Or, footh to fay, didft thou not hither roms In fearch of gains more plenty than at home?
191320559POE wftiofe name is concealed?
191320559POLITICAL, from 5roAf?
191320559POLYANDRIA( from sraAv?
191320559POLYBIUS, a famous Greek hiftorian, was born at Megalopolis, a city of Arcadia, 20?
191320559Part I. H E I S M.''13?
191320559Part I. Sr] P-R £ pliqft againft God?
191320559Pleas’d Cupid heard, and check’d his mother ’s pride: And who ’s blind now, mamma?
191320559Preparation
191320559Quidve ad amicitias, ufus reftumne, trahat nos?
191320559Romans 5 and having fent before fome of his^r*end?
191320559Rule?
191320559Say, has he giv’n in vain the heav’nly mufe?
191320559Say, is my form difpleafing to your fight?
191320559See Simon''s Hi/ lory of Irijh Coins, p. 1?.
191320559Shall the thing formedfay to him that Predefuiii formed it, Why haf thou made me thus?
191320559Should it''be iaige or Imali in quantity?
191320559Sweet are thy banks 5 oh, when fhall I once more With ravifh’d eyes review thine amell’d fhore?
191320559Taking it for granted, then, that our convi&ion of fuperior powers has long been univerfal, the important queftion is, From what caufe it proceeds?
191320559The Oby, Yenifea, and the reft of the Siberian Pol?
191320559The aftion of gravity has changed the ftate of the body — in what way?
191320559The combined momentum of two iuch lines wall therefore be?
191320559The houfes of Portfmouth amount to about 5,310?
191320559The progrefs of polytheiixn, as far as we have traced 142 P O L Y T Woi( hm r ’*^een reSu^ar?
191320559The queftion, Who made thee to differ?
191320559Thefe claffes are: i/?, Enamel, foft porcelain, and all crufts, enamels, or glafs, that contain lead in a notable quantity.
191320559This happened in the middle of September; what eft''eft then mull the intenfe froft of a night in January not produce?
191320559Thofe of his works that are ftill extant were printed at Cam¬ bridge in 1655,^vo?
191320559Thy cloudy look, why melting into tears, Unfeemly, now the! ky io bright appears?
191320559To thefe paftorals, which are written agreeably to the Gay?
191320559To which of thefe are we to attribute the good effefts which have appeared to us to refult from the ex¬ hibition of the whole?
191320559Uladiflaus V. died in 1435?
191320559W hat joy to hear the temped howl in vain, And clafp a fearful miftrefs to my bread?
191320559We Ihall fuppofe that a pra&itioner is fent for to a middle- aged man, in moderate circumftances, who has been for feme days labouring under?
191320559We know of very few works that have been written, V ” ”*?
191320559What a boundlefs fleld of invention is here?
191320559What avails ingenuous worth, Sprightly wit, or noble birth?
191320559What can we fay t’excufe our fecond fall?
191320559What could I have done in my vineyard that has? iot been done in it?
191320559What could I have done in my vineyard that has? iot been done in it?
191320559What fenfe can thefe wTords bear if we believe that God did by an abfolute decree doom fo many of them to everlafting mifery?
191320559What fhall we fay then?
191320559What great occafion call’d you hence to Rome?
191320559What have 1 faid?
191320559What is the belt formula for them?
191320559What now remains but tears and hopelefs fighs?
191320559What room for defcription, compa- rifon, and poetical fable?
191320559What then can we think of~ y a juftice that lhall condemn us for a fact that we ne¬ ver committed?
191320559What then is the pretext for abandoning this treaty?
191320559What tho ’ in folemn lilence all Move round the dark terreftrial ball?
191320559What tho ’ nor real voice or found Amid their radiant orb be found?
191320559What( hould I do?
191320559When the loofe mountain trembles from on high, “ Shall gravitation ceafe, if you go by?
191320559When was I bathing thus, and naked feen?
191320559When, in the cryftal of thy waters, fcan Each feature faded, and my colour wan?
191320559Whence then comes: this lime?
191320559When{ hall I fee my hut, the fmall abode Myfelf did raife and cover o’er with fod?
191320559Where are ‘ ‘ the crowds of concomitant, antecedent, or fubfequent ideas, with which thofe recolleftions ought naturally to have been attended?
191320559Where in my folding arms you lay reclin’d?
191320559Where is thy native fimple heart, Devote to virtue, fancy, art?
191320559Which of thefe is he to employ, or is he to make a trial of both?
191320559Who is the man, that, reading the part hiftory of this country, will{ how us any king that has done no wrong?
191320559Whole ambaffadors being afked, What punifhment they deferved for their re- ok?
191320559Why doth he yet findfault?
191320559Why in this mournful manner art thou found, Unthankful lad, when all things fmile around?
191320559Why may not our happinefs be made in fome cafes to depend upon the interceflion as it certainly does in many upon the good offices of our neighbours?
191320559Why may we not be adilled by the prayers of other men, as well as we are beholden for our fupport to their labour?
191320559Why then ftiould we not prepare falts from this vege¬ table?
191320559With regard to Great Britain, the earlieft Engliflr ErolJ?
191320559YY hence is this rage? — what fpirit, fay, J o battle hurries me away?
191320559YY hence is this rage? — what fpirit, fay, J o battle hurries me away?
191320559Yet lives there one, whofe heedlefs eye, Shall fcorn thy pale fhrine glimm’ring near?
191320559^ T??
191320559^ T??
191320559^ The hiflory of Portugal affords fcarce any event of Difference?
191320559a?
191320559ah, why this long delay?
191320559and blind I Can wealth, or grandeur, fatisfy the mind?
191320559and from hence, what noble excurftons may be made into hiftory, into panegyric upon the greateft beauties or heroes of the paft or pre- fent age?
191320559and is there any mode of making the bowels retain it for a fufficient time, to draw Bom it the proper nourithment?
191320559and, in confequence, does not this produce many incon¬ veniences?
191320559as a prerogative of the crown?
191320559cumfl: arices amidit which his providence has placed us?
191320559finS ’ 31?
191320559for who hath reffted his will?
191320559fphere- defcended maid, Friend of pleafure, wifdom ’s aid, Why, Goddefs, why to us denied?
191320559fubftances decom- pofing, 314 potato, compofition of, 312 fubftances decompo- fing?
191320559have pow’r to move?
191320559howT far have we Profan’d thy heav’nly gift of poefy?
191320559mnfdtz — I: m nf^ f?
191320559muft the wretched exiles ever mourn?
191320559my foul ’s far better part, Why with untimely forrows heaves thy heart?
191320559of creation and providence only for the fake of mani- fefting his own glory and perfedlions?
191320559of perfonal identity, which feems abfolutely infeparabk from every aft of memory?
191320559or does its effeft depend upon the good ufe which men may or may not make of it?
191320559or is it pcffible for any of them to fall away and periili finally?
191320559or was his death intended as a bene¬ fit to all, from which none are excluded excepting thofe who willingly rejeft it?
191320559or, if they fepa- rate, is not this fuch an imputation upon her,, as to pre¬ vent her getting another fuitor?
191320559p. 98,& c.; Lady Miller ’s Letters, or De la Lande; Captain Sutherland ’s Tour up the Straits, from Gibraltar to Conjlanlinople, p. 75?
191320559piate c C C CXY1T7?/ct/.
191320559printed by Helias de Llouften, at Bern in Switzerland, 14705 and in Z)i?
191320559r?
191320559the annual rent of corn lands 2,200,000?, and the net produce 9,000,000!.
191320559the fun as the fun is removed from the earth. ” Accord-7/ IA?
191320559the tree?
191320559to relieve thy bread?
191320559u^<5{ qoj- j as the throne is va.Ci3.nt, all the courts of Univerfal juftice?
191320559w H o. p p-
191320559w S3 £-9 c/ j 03 O X( X o W!/?
191320559war?
191320559what will ev’ry dirge avail?
191320559why is it faid, ye do always refijl the Holy Ghof; as your fathers didffo do ye?
191320559with eyes fo fair, What was thy delighted meafuve?
191320559{ hall all things yield return but love?
191320559§ The new prince, though not exceeding 13 years ofMhhridate?
191320559“ Is it painful to thee that the power and the w''orks of God exceed thy limit¬ ed capacity?
191320559“ Shall burning iEtna, if a fage requires, “ Forget to thunder, and recal her fires?
191320559„ One of the moft celebrated foreign elementary wmrks Gaubl?.
191320559•£* 4-T-\ a Iwmirv+ In/= ► c?
191678900& ios yaeg scrim « xxi iTTU^ix* s% xv\m scr]i, hx tovto xxi 6sof yv 0 Aayo?
191678900''3een obtained by Chrifi?
191678900''nt: ec* t0 Ifraelites to go three days journey into the wildernefs to ferve the God of their fathers, it was neceffary that he gypt?
191678900),_ which evidently means all the great principles of revelation; the term ywo- i?
191678900***** For us alone Was death invented?
1916789001 herefore R?
19167890013001?
19167890013?
191678900143 From repeated falivations, the bones in old people Ricket?.
19167890016. thy fight?
19167890018 J9 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 2?
191678900249 1 TEL are vaftly more manageable than thofe employed by Telefco? e Euler or D’Alembert.
1916789003 m\-2 a n*+ aP n n J 2 ‘ r t?
191678900390 derful works? ” which could not be done without faith; Theology to vvltom he will, notwithtlanding, lay, “ Depart from*n01''e L1."
191678900392 T H E O theology not?
191678900397 their writings we are taught every thing which it is our Theology duty to believe or to pra&ife in order to our own falva- I?
1916789003?
1916789004?
19167890052,* the oracle of Dodona, whether it would be proper to 53- give to their own gods the names of the Egyptian di¬ vinities?
1916789006 Natural Icale and its degrees, Difference of pitch of the male and female 6 Odlave,-what?
1916789006.17 I 2.2 C 18.25 24- 33 3 °-33 36.42 42- 5 48- 5 54- 58 60.58 b\ a", b"25- 5 S8- 1?
191678900? «?/- N ° 50.)
191678900? ‘ rei^ons The following praaical direaions for the ufe of this in- o/ theVhlf- ftrument are given by Mr Crocker, and apply to hisodolite.
191678900A fcale of^ G divided into 60 parts, for the beats of the major third C
191678900A great ma- ny, he fays, wrote letters to the magiftrates before their Moore''?
191678900A queftion has been ftarted of fome importance, What would have finally become of men if the firft covenant had not been violated?
191678900AV2: « V2= F/: Ftp( already demonffrated) and Ftp=^ F/-F?,( or/?)
191678900AV2: « V2= F/: Ftp( already demonffrated) and Ftp=^ F/-F?,( or/?)
191678900Ae;e. 9 10 1 2 J3 M 16 i?
191678900All the papers of Orobio in defence of Judaifm, as oppofed to Chriffianity, are# iyar]nir Pr’^e^ large?
191678900An oblique pencil BP l?
191678900And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born?
191678900And they were all amazed, and marvelled, laying one to another, Behold, are not all thefe who fpeak Galileans?
191678900And they were all amazed, and were in doubt, faying f Acts u. one to anotller?
191678900And what fort of plays are thefe?
191678900And what in this cafe muff become of the minds of the common peo¬ ple?
191678900And what rules of interpretation will authorife us to interpret eating and trees literally in one part of the fentence and figuratively in the other?
191678900And, in the firft place, how ftrongly do the works of creation imprefs on our minds a convi&ion of the infinite power of their Author?
191678900Are we enrolled as fubjefts, fervants, and foldiers, under him?
191678900Are we hereby regenerated and made the temple of the Father?
191678900Beats, In confonances, no inequality of found is perceptible, what?
191678900Bettefworth, enraged at his difgrace and lofs, went to the dean, and demanded whether he was the author of that poem?
191678900Boerhaave fays that* Pfo?.
191678900Boerhaave pays this author the following com¬ pliment:///
191678900But RN 1 t?
191678900But are good works, therefore, of no ufe in the Chriftian fyftem?
191678900But how, it will be alked, can three divine perfons Difficulties be but one and the fame G °.d?
191678900But if this be the cafe, we may properly afk, whence had thofe Piatoniits the doctrine themfelves?
191678900But is this a fair ftate of the cafe?
191678900But it is intercepted by the lens A a, and its axis is bent to¬ wards the axis of the? elefcope in the direftion a b.
191678900But rgv — s; there¬ fore?
191678900But this can not be TEL[* TeIefcop?.
191678900Do ye judge its come- uprightly'', O ye Tons of men? ” Ey comparing thefe «^-i> —, texts with 1 Sam.
191678900Doth annihilation impeach that wifdom and goodnefs which was difplayed when God brought it out of nothing?
191678900Fo^mputa- what is that we mean by faying that the fin of Adam T10N re* is imputed to his pofterity?
191678900For thy fervant doth know that I have finned?''''
191678900How are thefe two paffages to be reconciled?
191678900How did thefe come into the world?
191678900How then comes an uniform caufe to produce unfteady effedts?
191678900How would our fine ladies like to be told, that infiead of tea they drink nothing but the infufion of mofs from the rocks of Mang- ing- hien( f)?
191678900IS?
191678900If each individual were to report his own fortune, could the report be trufted to?
191678900If either the mixed cup or unleavened bread be abfolutely neceflary to the validity of the facrament, why not wane made from the grapes of Judaea?
191678900If the incident rays are parallel, r becomes infinite, and cuius, let us now7 make/: m 7 m- But in this cafe k becomes rr —, and a
191678900If this deli¬ cious commodity is adulterated in China, can we flatter ourfelves that none comes to us but what is pure and unmixed?
191678900If we look upon this our earth, what fcope does it furniih for admiration?
191678900If, becaufe we came into life without our own confent, we might quit it at pleafure, why may we not fpend our life alfo as we pleafe?
191678900In fijeh circumftances, how did they conduft tbemfelves?
191678900In fome cafes of this kind there is a great dilata- with aman- tion?
191678900Is he God and Lord over us?
191678900Is he acknowledged as the objeft of worfhip?
191678900Is it a proof of condefcenfion to fulfil one ’s en¬ gagement?
191678900Is it not in that thou GOEST with us?
191678900Is the guilt of that fin^V-9 transferred from him to them?
191678900It could not find them guilty fo?
191678900It has been afked, Why, if the Author of Nature be a benevolent Being, are we neceffarily fubjeCt to pain, difeafes, and death?
191678900It is required to determine the focal didance BI?
191678900It is required to find the focus F of refra£led rays?
191678900It was add¬ ed( fays the apoftle), becaufe of tranfgreflions, till the feed fhould come to whom the promife was made. ’?
191678900J/?
191678900KecKovgya?
191678900L. 93 3 5 ® 43 95 2 48
191678900Let ‘ b[) ’ be tuned a perfeCl major third below and ‘ e[? ’ a perfeCl major third below ‘ g ’.
191678900Mrtural reli- Wollafton indeed polilively affirms that it is, and en- gion?
191678900Now the local az c?
191678900Now this queftion alfo, which Sc Paul has decided, is previous to the queftion, What condi¬ tions even the aft of grace itfelf finally infifts upon?
191678900Now, this in¬ tercalary found can not be both in the ratio of 16: x?
191678900Now?
191678900Objefts appear to him as viewed through akyd16?
191678900Of J 7}?
191678900Or fuppofe us only felicitous for what we beft underfland; which fpecies of this latter genus ftiould the facred writers have pre¬ ferred?
191678900Plow are thefe phenomena accounted for?
191678900Setting out, therefore,* S.. W E[ I,^ue^en* i therefore, in a fmall boat with fails and oars, he pafled r<5?
191678900Shall he ftand upon his innocence, and reft upon ftridl law?
191678900Should the eaftern eloquence have been employed?
191678900Should the weftern?
191678900So that when this free gift, forfeited by the//y?
191678900So- that St Paul might well iay, “ Do we then make void the law( the moral law) through faith?
191678900Such a wilh is in effe£l a prayer, and will always bs accompanied with adoration, confef- 3?
191678900Sweden, on reafonnbie term?.
191678900T H E O Fall of A- and again, In the 58th Pfalm, he fays, “ Do ye indeed dam, and fpeak righteoufnefs, O congregation?
191678900TABERNiEMONTANA, in Botany, a genus of plants belonging to the clafs of pentandria, and order of monogynia 3 and in the natural fyftem arranged unde?
191678900THAPSIA, the Deadly Carrot, a genus of plants belonging to the clafs pentandria, and in the natural fyftem ranging under the 45th order, umbellate?.
191678900The depravity of human nature is a punifti- ment for fin?
191678900The diffolute foftnefs of the Afiatic Greeks, or the dry concifenefs of the Spartans?
191678900The diftrifts dependent on thefe cantons were, the principality of Neufchatel; the bifliopric of Bafl) county of Baden; the free Baillage?
191678900The firft term of the analogy,,, 1 1 rT,,^^3/ x t\
191678900The inftrument for taking angles muft be ex¬ ceedingly accurate, made on purpofe with telefcopic fights, 2 SURVEYING HZAf r/ n firr/d.rc////?
191678900The tyrant, perceiving he had another arrow concealed under his cloak, afked him for what purpofe?
191678900There are two kinds of fupines: one, called the yfry?
191678900Therefore?
191678900This being made rr, gives us ture is about I j": of FG, and that AP3 AP 8 AC* S^AC?
191678900This father, in his fifth difeourfe againft the Arians, fays, ku]x rot lactvr/ iv tv ravlvi w 0 Aeyof y.xi o Xoyo?.
191678900Thus when St Paul fays*, that “ charity fuffereth long and*.?
191678900Thus “ Spirit is faid J to make intercef- fion for us but with whom can we fuppofe God the Father, the fountain of divinity, to intercede?
191678900Thus, when Job fays, “ who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?
191678900We fhould think it very abfurd to recom¬ mend a man at once to the favour of a king and a beg¬ gar?
191678900We have an inftance of it in the very firft line of the Iliad: A^AAajo?
191678900We may avoid the folution by an approximation v/ hich is fufficiently accu-?
191678900We muft therefore tune the intercalary found in fuch a diminifhed relation to A and to B, that it may ferve either for A:$ or B[?.
191678900Were any rights in reality betrayed?
191678900What fear I then, rather what know to fear Under this ignorance of good and evil, Of God or death, of law or penalty?
191678900What human model then was the Holy Ghoft to follow?
191678900When they are flight, and when the af- fe£ted part is not extenfive?
191678900Where then is the wonder that parents are difappointed?
191678900Which then of thefe, the oak or the acorn, was the firft, and whence was its exiftence derived?
191678900Why may not God communicate the power of making worlds to any being W''hom he may choofe to honour with fo glorious a pre¬ rogative?
191678900Why not conditions therefore as well as qualifi¬ cations?
191678900Why then fhould not thefe have been employed to credit the apoftolic infpiration?
191678900Will not the fine arts fupply a laftmg feaft to the mind?
191678900Will you be faithful to me, as your forefathers were to Guilavus Vafa and Guflavus Adolphus?
191678900Xhe forefts produce a great variely of game, efpecially ‘, rr — y—«»/ tiae|arge yack cock?
191678900\-^1 68 O?
191678900^ t?
191678900^uis comitiis prcefiil?
191678900^uis majorem populi partem fujfragiis privavit?
191678900_ 1?
191678900a- year, greatly exceed in number all the livings in Scotland?
191678900and he who is born of a woman that he fhould be righteous?
191678900and where is that wine to be found?
191678900and where would be the glory of the fpirit of God, if redemption wTere not by him effedlually applied to every individual for whom it w as wrought''?
191678900and why is fuch a horror of death implanted in our breafts, feeing that by the laws of nature death is inevitable?
191678900beauty of the hu¬ man form?
191678900caui''e the notes marked^ or[?, are, when tuned in this jor third is the harmonic interval molt in uie( g).
191678900earth?
191678900fpedable of all the philofophers of antiquity; and lie feems to have ftudied this great queftion with uncom¬ mon care: yet what were his conclufions?
191678900him*? ” 6, 9; Job As the works of creation are the effe&s of God Vx-4 »& c* power, they likewife in the moft eminent manner difplay his wifdom.
191678900language*. ” “ If I be a Majier( in the Hebrew7 6, 7. ado?iim^ masters), where is my fear f? ” “ The fear+ Mai.
191678900lic.t what will moll highly gratify the admirers of paftoral poetry, is an edition publithed in 1770?
191678900m—1/, mlPX?
191678900n1 ar?
191678900of God- n;te effeft to have proceeded from no caufe, or an infi-''J''v nite body in motion to have been moved by nothing?
191678900or has ever any one attempted to attribute the formation of external or internal tumors to compreflion?
191678900or is\t gain to him that we make our ways perfed?
191678900or to us denied This intellectual food, for beads referved?
191678900or, can there be wanting a pleafurable enjoyment, fo long as there remains even one ad¬ vantageous truth to be difcovered or confirmed?
191678900or, if one can ever be weary of benefiting mankind?
191678900order to which it is fubjebl attended with ficknefs or with pain?
191678900or{ hall he plead guilty, and reft in an aft of grace?
191678900r( ra-f- 2) I. c m*- — 4 c( 2 r «-J-1)+ 4 m m ’ 2+ 4( 2? n''+1) —+ 4 m 2(»/+i)( w—1)( 3wz''+ 2)( m—1)* m''m''C?/*(2W+I) C«,(»j+2).
191678900them remained unconvinced, is aftonilhing?
191678900when compared with that which muft for ever fubfift T between the Almighty Creator of heaven and earth and the moft elevated creature?
191678900why not that particular kind of wine which w^as ufed by our Saviour?
191678900would be the glory of God the Father in forming a Theology fcheme which, with refpedl to multitudes, does not luc- ITK:>r(- petu- ceed?
191678900yet learned he obedience by the things which he fuffered. What lenfe is there in this argu¬ ment?
191678900“ But are there not fome general principles of elo-<, quence in common to all the fpecies?
191678900“ For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body fj and as the body is one and hath many( j?
191678900“ I came into life without my own confent, and may I not quit it at pleafure? ”( fay the advocates for fuicide).
191678900“ Lift up your eyes on high, and behold, who hath cre¬ ated all thefe things?
191678900“ When they therefore were come together, they afked of him, faying, Lord, wilt thou at this time reftore again the kingdom to Ifrael?
191678900“ Wherefore then ferved the law?
191253836''C?
191253836( place to point out the method of afeertaining its magni- mjcrofco^(?
191253836- OPT, ° f Lenfes-^ t0 femidiameter of the fecond furface, To is''?
1912538361 Who got by it? ’ look to it, I befeech you, that you are not confounded.
1912538361 he Greeks more ordinarily calPlt, Ne<-? i0< r- iio7nov.
1912538361 herefore the triangles OGE, Ejrq are equiangular, and confequently Q G: GE= E v: p- yy • OfVfF- fV1?
19125383610. a?.
1912538361> M.. Euler propofed to introduce vifion by refleded 1?
1912538362 ° 9 that, there is any impad in this cafe, or that the re- Law of fledtxng impad fhould ceaie at a particular obliquity?
191253836230 OPT Appear- tit at from whence thofe which enter the other at k an dVs ° d^"^eem to fl ° w?
19125383625?
1912538362i//y, But did not Julian the apoftate confult thefe oracles?
1912538363* 79 S- H 6.36 7-S1 8.64 9.67 10.44 ix.69 12.6?
19125383632 £ for their advantage?
1912538364?
191253836?
191253836? 7_ I''T.
191253836? Ut body or orange, as it is called, WenT, r''7 tbc"1 T?''
191253836? Ut body or orange, as it is called, WenT, r''7 tbc"1 T?''
191253836? iagnifying power of frnall con¬ vex lenfes or fngle microfcopes, the dijlance at which the eije fees diftinBly being feven inches.
191253836? r.
191253836A Ne JV Table of the?
191253836A perfon has feen 3 piece of ground covered with them, and killed with a rod between fixty U and* 54 Crotalu?
191253836And fo when Medea fays,/ could fave; and do you ojk if I can defray?
191253836And then adds, “ But what will you fay now, if I ftiould deny that ever I fent you that letter> How will you prove it?
191253836And will this woman dare to come out of thofe doors, and talk of the force of poi- fon?
191253836And yet who does not perceive how flat and languid fuch a way of talking muft have appeared at that time?
191253836Antithefi,?, or oppofition, both in the words and fenfe, has often the like beautiful e lie cl.
191253836Are they Ifraelites?
191253836Are they the feed of Abraham?
191253836Are you not fenfible what diiorders fortune oc- cafions everywhere?
191253836As if I alk a perfon, Where he is going?
191253836As when Cicero fays, “ Catiline, how long will you abufe our patience?
191253836At whofe fide was its point directed?
191253836Brownilh yellow; fpots on the back acutely ovate, blackhh, and edged with white; thofe on the fide?
191253836But how can you make it out?
191253836But indeed there was hardly any thing, however trivial, from which the ancients did not draw?
191253836But pray why Ihould I not have defended him?
191253836But who W''ould think of forming an argument from this againft the cultivation of our teafoning powers?
191253836But why am I averfe to peace?
191253836But( con¬ tinues he) of what nature is this matter which an animal or vegetable affimilates to its own fubftance?
191253836By the hand- writing?
191253836CO ■;?
191253836Can I fay the people were not told of it?
191253836Can I remove an opinion fo deeply and long rooted in the minds of men?
191253836Can any thing be told in a more plain and fimple manner than this?
191253836Can it be right then to ccme into that, as if it was written, which it would be a crime • to write?
191253836Clairaut''s calculations respecting telefcopes, I?
191253836Contemporary with Vitellio was Roger Bacon, a man0fRoS< TC of extenfive genius, who wrote upon almoft every Bacon?
191253836Dec I*34 2.2?
191253836Did all I had read and ftudied avail nothing?
191253836Did he drive away the tribune, who oppofed the palling a law?
191253836Did he take poffeflion of a temple by force of arms?
191253836Did he think he could eafily leffen me in the fenate?
191253836Did we not all in a man¬ ner engage ourfelves by oath, to have the fame friends, and the fame enemies, which you had?
191253836Do not they excite, reftrain, prove, admire, and ihame?
191253836Do not they exprefs joy, for- row, doubt, confeflion, penitence, meafure, plenty, number, and time?
191253836Do not w''6 dehre with them, promife, call, difmifs, threaten, befeech, deteft, fear, inquire, deny?
191253836Do not you perceive your defigns are difeovered, and that all who are prefent know of your ccnfpiracy?
191253836Do vou coniider the difficulty qf managing a public caufe? ” with much more to the fame purpofe.
191253836Do you fear the cenfure of po- fterity?
191253836Enemies?
191253836Flow long wTill your fury infult us?
191253836For the refraCtive power of glafs to that of water is as 55 to 34?
191253836For to whom elfe is it^ owing, that thofe who endeavoured to pleafe you, ad- dreffed themfelves to Philotas?
191253836For what could be a larger and more copious fubject, than for me fpeak for myfelf againft Antony?
191253836For what muft I fay?
191253836For who can be thought fo well qualified to give the rules of any art, as lie who excelled all mankind in the pra61ice of them?
191253836From hence arifes this grand queftion, or ftate of the caufe, Whether it was lawful for Milo to hill Clod ms?
191253836From hence therefore this fubordinate queftion follows, Whether Clo- dius ajjaffinated Milo?
191253836From thele there grows no P?
191253836Grinding When the metal is caft, and prepared by the com- E> q1?,&.<=.
191253836Had I ne¬ ver feen or heard any thing in my whole life?
191253836Has Cornelius carried any law contrary to the omens?
191253836Has he aflaulted the conful?
191253836Has he plundered the treafury?
191253836Has he thrown contempt upon religion?
191253836Has he violated any law?
191253836He alfo obferved, that he could percei\«2 no difference of light in the ftiadows"ofef 5?
191253836How few now underfland the remaining fragments of the twelve tables?
191253836How fuccinCt, and yet how majeftic, is that expreflion of Coefar upon his victory over Pharnaces?
191253836I will not afk, when you ever gave a proof tiorv of it 3 but when you fo much as attempted''dt?
191253836I7^ 5?
191253836If it is alked, how is more( kill acquired by the obfer- vation of greater numbers?
191253836If then I be a father, where is mine honour?
191253836If we look into the different ages of the La¬ tin writers, what great alterations and changes do we find in their language?
191253836If you believe not common things, and which may be called earthly, how w ill you believe me if I fpeak to you of heavenly things?
191253836In ombre by five, which many, on account of its not requiring fo clofe an attention, prefer to that by three, only eight card?
191253836In order to obtain a more fatisfaftory proof, that rays of light really bend, in pafling by the edges of bo- I c s. is?
191253836Into the capitol?
191253836Is he to tell all that he knows touching the matter in queflion?
191253836Is the authority of this order weakened?
191253836Is this a fair conteft?
191253836It W''as not from cruelty indeed( for what is there with w- hich this affembly is lefs chargeable?
191253836It is to be feared how the city wxmld bear this abiion?
191253836It is tough and firm m its ftruCiure, and in many tilings refembks common focus; but inftesd of growing in the Own?
191253836It is true, this jf?
191253836Its bite is reckoned as dan- LOGY?
191253836Likewife the images p q and 7?
191253836Mr Short indeed affirmed, that he had acquired that faculty, bu1?
191253836N U M[ 95] N U M NumiiH?..
191253836Nay, how many words do we meet with even in Plautus, the meaning of which has not yet been fixed with certain* ty by the ikill of the beft critics?
191253836Need I mention to you princes who had been extremely happy, had a more timely death fecured them from impending evils?
191253836Nicodemus taking this in the literal fenfe, made an- fwer, “ How can a man that is old be born again?
191253836Noyon is particularly remarkable for the birth of the tamous John Calvin, who Tfras bom here on the 10th of July 15^ 2, and died at Geneva the?
191253836O ft A T Elocution, what follow7?, which is all ironical.
191253836ORA[ and external voice?
191253836Of the focal di/ lance of rays refraBed by fiaf- Jw?
191253836Of the former fort is that joke of Cicero: My brother being a fed by Philip, why he barkedfo?
191253836Or what is fo neceffary as to be always furnifhed with arms to guard yourfelf, affert your right, or repel injuries?
191253836Part I. T O R Y. but his country, by demolifhing the wealthy city of Co- E?
191253836R?
191253836Refradhon, It muft be acknowledged that it is a very curious v f ciicum.iance, that a body which is perfedly traniba- i?
191253836Shall I call you citvzens, who have revolted from your country?
191253836Shall I deny the fcandal thrown upou him of bribing the judges?
191253836Should we have refufed to take this, which you as it were propofed to us?
191253836Sir Ifaac( how s alio, by experiments made with con-''^ V
191253836So like wife, in his fecond Philippic, where he fays, “ What can I think?
191253836So that in regard to this point, which of them aflaulted the other?
191253836Soldiers, who have difowned the authority of your general, and broke your military oath?
191253836That I feared being called to an account by the people?
191253836That I lied from a confcioufnefs of guilt?
191253836That I wanted the fupport of good and honeft men?
191253836That is falfe That I was afraid of dealh?
191253836The appearance of objeXs refleXed from plane furfaces, 177?
191253836The conclufion of the oath fometimes runs, ‘ ita?
191253836The conftitution of the atmofphere and of the fea, wefoall 5n1d?
191253836The cuftom of ofir anceflors?
191253836The fecond con- fy‘ngp ° we?
191253836The laws relating to the punifliment of Roman citizens?
191253836The luxuries, and not the neceffaries, of life were repeated objects of hi?
191253836The ufe?
191253836Therefore in refpeft of thofe rays which are point
191253836They did not think language of itfelf fuf¬ ficient to exprefs the height of their paflion?, unlefs en¬ forced by uncommon motions and geftures.
191253836This is done fometimes for greater emphalis, as when w- e fay, Where in the world is he?
191253836Thus when Cicero fays, “ What, Tubero, did your drawn fword do in the Pharfalian battle?
191253836To what caufe fhall we aferibe thefe fingu- lar appearances?
191253836Was I fo unexperienced, fo ignorant, fo void of reafon and prudence?
191253836Was life defire able when all my friends were in fuch forrow and myfelf in fo great diftrefs, deprived of all the ffifts both of nature and fortune?
191253836We have a beautiful inftance of it in St Paul, when he fays, “ Are they Hebrews?
191253836We have alfo three memoirs of M. D’Alembert upon this’fubjedt, among thofe of the French Academy 5 in the years 1764?
191253836Well, and did I then avoid it> Nay, was there any thing in the''world that I could ap¬ prehend more defirable?
191253836What bounds wdll you fet to your unbridled rage?
191253836What can I do now?
191253836What can be faid either worthy of him, or new to you, or which every one has not heard?
191253836What is fo popular as li¬ berty, which even beafts as well as men ieem to covet and prefer above all things?
191253836What power is it that communicates to this matter the activity and motion neceffary to penetrate this mould?
191253836What prevents you?
191253836What remains, what imprefiions, what difference or diftinftion, do you fee in this mafs of fire?
191253836When Jefus was imply a/ hed by the high prieft, what it was which certain falfe witneffes teftified agairift him?
191253836Whence came it?
191253836Where are now the great empires of the world, and their great imperial cities?
191253836Where is that concern, that ardour, which ufed to extort pity eveil from children?
191253836White bodies refledl more light than other?, 28.
191253836Who at one time was more acceptable to the beft men, and who more in¬ timate with the worft?
191253836Who more de¬ voted to pleafures, who more patient in labours?
191253836Who more rapacious, and yet more profufe?
191253836Who of us, do you think, is ignorant of wdiat you did the laft night, and the night before, where you was, who was wdth you, and what you refolved on?
191253836Who therefore would not efteem, and in a particular manner endeavour to furpafs others in that wherein mankind principally excels brute beafts?
191253836Who was once a better patriot, and who a greater enemy to this ftate?
191253836Why do you diffemble?
191253836Why do you hefitate?
191253836Why not?
191253836Why then is he bewailed longeft in our family who died moft happi¬ ly?
191253836Will not you order him to be imprifoned, ccndemned, and executed?
191253836Will you engage on this foot?
191253836Would he con¬ tend with me for eloquence?
191253836_? 9 Afp.—155 abdominal fcuta, and 37 fubcaudal{ cAzs.
191253836and if I be a wafer, where is my fear?
191253836and, if fuch a force exift, would it not be by a fiiniiar force that the internal mould itfelf might be reproduced?
191253836as above?
191253836but the count regained his favour, by procuring for him the fair atlrefs Calderon?..
191253836defeat by Alexander, being brought before him, and afked How he expeBed to he treated?
191253836did not I know that life is fhort, but the glory of generous ac¬ tions permanent?
191253836ed j and boldly prefcnted their piece?
191253836farther uie can 1 think myfelf to be, thus difappointed by heaven?
191253836fnall I not ad¬ mire him r fhall I not by all means defend him? ” A contrary method to the former is, to defeend from a general to a particular.
191253836how did they get it?
191253836let GF) HE5 be the incident ravs_ Now?
191253836muchch^?
191253836on?
191253836or Roman generals, who wanted nothing to confummate their glory but that they lived too long?
191253836or circle?
191253836or fo delightful to hear, as a judicious and folid difcourfe in florid and polite language?
191253836or fo powerful and grand, as to influence the populace, the judges, the fenate, by the charms of eloquence?
191253836or only all that fhall be ajhed of him?
191253836or what he is doing?
191253836that I am contem¬ ned?
191253836that it was not talked of.in the court mentioned in the fenate?
191253836the boys of which are nominated by the mayor for the time being, with the confent[ 66] NOR[ 6?]
191253836their pillars, trophies, and monuments of glory?
191253836thole- who have leaft concern with her?
191253836v>£- 5- Apparatus of a wooden box Indies wide, xo^ inches long, Meafuring? nd 3?
191253836v>£- 5- Apparatus of a wooden box Indies wide, xo^ inches long, Meafuring? nd 3?
191253836where fhall I go?
191253836where fhall I turn myfelf?
191253836which way fhall I bring in my accufation?
191253836will not ffie dread the confcious walls, nor that fad and mournful night?
191253836will not ftie fear, left the houfe itfelf fhould fpeak the villany?
191253836you fo ignorant, as to think it unhappy for your ion, that, weary of life, he has withdrawn himfelf to his an- ceftors?
191253836— lives?
191253836“ How( fays he) was the de- fign of this poifon laid?
191253836“ If any one( fays he) fhould bring you upon trial, and ufe that faying of Caf- firs, Cut hano?
191253836“ Now, where^continued he) can we find better friends than in brothers?
191253836“ Sir( replied the abbe), will you allow them to remain in your antichamber?
191253836“ Was it becoming me( fays he) to expeft death with that ccmpofednefs of mind as ffime have imagined?
191253836“ Who( fays he) ever was, or need bo more knowing than this man?
191253836■ “ You will alk me( fays he), why we are fo delighted with this man?
191253839( dd) The eighth month?
191253839( zz) A[?
191253839), we lliall not here flop to examine this reafoning.—We may however alk, Whether all our fenfations individually be not excited for a certain end?
191253839), we( hall find this mo- I c. Part I. dulation G, G[?, w’hich would likewife give a minor Theory of femitone( xx).
191253839* See
191253839, Thus the courfe from Palma to St Vincent will be found to be about SSW W, and the diftance 13 °:?
1912538391793, at a( hip in longitude 1090 48''E.?
1912538391793, in tude of the fun ’s lower limb parent time?
1912538391799?
1912538391816?
19125383919 54.8 20 7.9 20 20.7 20 33.0 20 45.0 20 c6.6 21 7.9 21 18.7 21 29.1 21 39.1 31 I1?
19125383923 Vegetable-?.
191253839239 Many writers draw their proofs of the immortality Proot nom of the foul, and ot a future ftate of regards and pU_ jF?
1912538393. fliows a front view of the under- lhot water-?
19125383944 What mean ye, that ye ufe this proverb, The fa¬ thers have eaten four grapes, and the children ’s teeth are fet on edge?
191253839494,488 iWS?
191253839570 9''N, the fol¬ lowing equal altitudes of the fun were obferved: Requir- • ed the error of the watch?
191253839631 long, flrong, and like a knife; containing the Heron?, Claffitka- Jabirus and Ibiffes.
191253839636 NATURAL^-donly the knowledge of the diftinftive chara6lers of Natural P^an*s?
191253839684 to''fcl^1 Q1CU ar ’ an?
1912538399d 15h 31''33 E- h 4?, 17W.
191253839: Game?
191253839? 1- two ftories, had elegant apartments both above and be¬ low, furnifiled in a ftyle far fuperior to any thing our author ever faw in that country.
191253839? rkl the country, and prefumed to ftrive with the genius of Belifarius.
191253839? ur''^//u''(/A_ fB?defSa^.#.|^G_c vG C F C F fcdefggabr^a.s\: tdxz/ e £ 7 yC.6.
191253839?, c, d, e, f. or cf-} C » D ’ E ’ F ’ G ’ A ’ B, C ‘( See Ex.
191253839?< 5.
191253839A ffiip from latitude 70 19''N. failed 854 miles fouth — Required the latitude come to?
191253839A( hip from latitude 390 22''N. failed due north 560 miles — Required the latitude come to?
191253839A( hip from longitude 90 34''E. failed weffer- ly till the difference of longitude was 230 18''—Re¬ quired the longitude come to?
191253839After this detail of the minifters of this folemn fer- vice, we return to the? nyjlce, or candidates for initia- f Juftin.
191253839And how does B communicate in one cafe 24 de¬ grees of motion, and C 32, by equal aftions?
191253839And if the-quan¬ tity of matter in a given fpace can by any rarefaction be diminilhed, what fhould hinder a diminution to in¬ finity?
191253839And is old Double dead?
191253839And thus we might find both the quantity and determina¬ tion of this circular motion, even in an immenfe va-?
191253839Ano¬ ther query naturally occurs j that is, to what purpofe did the myftagogues apply this communication?
191253839Are you not afhamed to deliver your general into the hands of boys?
191253839As radius----- 10.00000 is to the fecant of the?
191253839As radius----- io.ooooo?
191253839Before the chief gate there is a fquare court paved with white marble*, and low galleries round it,?
191253839But does the fpeech change of place really declare what motion is?
191253839But it may be laid, how( hall we diftinguifh this chord from the feventh major, which, as it would feem, ought to be marked with 37$?
191253839But then what is the pledge wffiich the public faith has pawned for the fecurity of thefe debts?
191253839But what do we know of all this?
191253839But where does this money exift?
191253839But why{ hould this multiplied found only ap¬ pear to contain three, and why thefe three preferable to others?
191253839But would this be a defini¬ tion of a flroke?
191253839By what medium the worfliip of Ofiris at cail€d Abydus and Tyre was connefted, we drall leave to//?.
191253839Ce mortel, qui montra tant de zele pour moi, Vit- il encore?
191253839ChryO F i?.
191253839Commence-''pjie initiations began with a reprefentation of the mentot thewan< jer;n^s of- Ceres?
191253839D G G Bfr D F, G B[?
191253839December 20. i793 »^at''tuc^e longitude 83 ° W, the fun was obferved to fet SW# Re- quired the variation?
191253839Declination 12.85111 5.07320 7- 777- 91 o?
191253839Did nature bring forth the tulip and the lily, the rofe and the honeyfuckle, to be neglefted by the haughty pretender to Superior reafon?
191253839El?, F, G, A, Bl).
191253839Every note maiked with a t> gives the tritone a- bove figured with?.
191253839Explana- 1805?
191253839F G At?
191253839Finally, one half of a femitone minor, which differs from unity by: its half then will be yT?.
191253839For are the refults of experience any thing more but mere approaches to truth?
191253839For fliould we imagine our terreftrial bodies removed to the orb of the moon, and there, together with the?
191253839For hour comes the fun to poficfs that power, and what makes the fluid return to the fun?
191253839For, Who can forbear to fmile with Nature?
191253839Given both latitudes and courfe, requir¬ ed the diftance and difference of longitude?
191253839Given courfe and departure, to find the diftance and difference of latitude?
191253839Have I any pleafure that the wicked ftiould die, faith the Lord God; and not that he ftiould return from his ways, and live? ” E%ekiel xvii.
191253839He perfuaded them to try all poflible mean?
191253839Here again we would be involved in a diffi¬ culty?
191253839How a fcore of ewes now?
191253839How good a yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair?
191253839How many means, of confequence, may be prac- tifed to vary the expreflion of the fame modulation?
191253839How near the wind did fhe make her way good?
191253839If feeling or fenfation be the tefl, who( hall decide, that the lenfitive plant[ mimofa pu- dka''), pofleffes it not?
191253839If one ftiould defcend from F to Bj?
191253839Ihow the chords G Bi?
191253839In 1744?
191253839In every chord, whether pcrfeft, or of the Major feventh, or of the fixth, if it is meant that the third chords » above th?
191253839In fuch a flate of fociety, what difpofitions can be looked for in the people, but cruelty, treachery, and revenge?
191253839Is it not fufficient that it is fomething aftive?
191253839Is it not more conlonant to reafon and analogy, to aferibe to the whole continued motion one uninterrupted aftion?
191253839Is old Double of your town living yet?
191253839It is required to know, if in both cafes A refifts equally, and if B and C aft-equally?
191253839It may be obferved, that this B$, deduced from the feries of thirds, is to the Bj^ deduced from the feries of fifths, as 444 ’s to 444444?
191253839Its wealth confifts in the fruitfulnefs of its foil: its corn, fruit?,,, M O R[ 414] M O R^Torccco.
191253839K M S T U: 2 9/ u, f
191253839Knew you not Pompey?
191253839Latitude of Cape St Vincent 37 2 N. Difference of latitude 12 55 — 775 mile?.
191253839Let the latitude of the given parallel be 490 30''N, the diftance failed 136.4 E. Required the difference of longitude?
191253839M At that O T[ Motouali?, country.
191253839M O* R[ 4c* 1 MO R of Ills phyfician,?.nd that of profejfor royal of botany, with a penfion of 200I.
191253839Maffanielloj in the me^n time?
191253839May not contrail heighten the pleafure, by oppofing our prefent fecurity to the danger of encountering the objeft reprefented?
191253839Motion is a change •, but as there are many fpecies of change, which of thofe fpecies is motion?
191253839Mr Ives fays it was the bell built city he had feen in Turkey •, bu?
191253839Necho, who had no defigns againft him, font to tell him, “ What have I to do with you, king of Judah?
191253839New Fony?
191253839Now what fliall fecure a man ’s virtue in circumftances of fuch trial?
191253839Quid caufae eff, merito quin iliis Jupiter ambas Jratus buccas infet, neque fe fore pofthac Tam facilem dicat, votis ut pnebeat aurem?
191253839Rcquir-d the latitude?
191253839Re quired the latitude and longitude come to?
191253839Required her prefent latitude, courfe, and diftance made good?
191253839Required its velocity and direflion?
191253839Required our prefent latitude, departure, and dire£t courfe and di- Itance?
191253839Required the apparent time at Greenwich?
191253839Required the apparent time of obfervation?
191253839Required the bearing and diftance of Beachyhead from Dungenels?
191253839Required the courfe and departure?
191253839Required the courfe and departure?
191253839Required the courfe and didance?
191253839Required the courfe and diftance between Genoa, in latitude 440 25''N, longitude 8 ° 36''E, and Palermo, in latitude 38 °\d N, longitude 130 38, E?
191253839Required the courfe and diftance made good?
191253839Required the courfe and diftance on each tack, the( hip lying within points of the wind?
191253839Required the courfe and diftance run, and longitude come to?
191253839Required the courfe and di¬ ftance on each tack?
191253839Required the courfe made good, and the la¬ titude and longitude come to?
191253839Required the courfe per compafs, and diftance from Greigfnefs to Flamborough Head?
191253839Required the courfe, and latitude come to?
191253839Required the courfe, and the latitude and Ion- gitude come to?
191253839Required the courfe, and the latitude and longi¬ tude come to?
191253839Required the courfe, diftance, and difference of longitude?
191253839Required the difference of latitude and depar¬ ture?
191253839Required the difference of latitude be¬ tween the Lizard, in latitude 490 57''N. and Cape St Vincent, in latitude 370 2''N?
191253839Required the difference of longitude between Edinburgh and New York, their longitudes being 30 14''W. and 74 ° io''W. refpe6!ively?
191253839Required the diftance and bearing of the Start from the Eddiftone, the variation being 2^ points W?
191253839Required the diftance and departure an- fvvering to the courfe 28 °, and difference of latitude 60 miles?
191253839Required the diftance and difference of latitude?
191253839Required the diftance failed, and longitude come to?
191253839Required the diftance of the( hip from the Nefs at each ftation?
191253839Required the diftance run, and latitude and longitude come to?
191253839Required the diftance, and the latitude and longitude come to?
191253839Required the diftance?
191253839Required the error of the watch?
191253839Required the fhip ’s pre* fent place?
191253839Required the fun ’s declination at noon 16th April 1810, in longitude 84 ° W?
191253839Required the fun ’s declination at noon 22d March 1793, in longitude 1510 E?
191253839Required the latitude and longitude come to, and diftance failed?
191253839Required the latitude and longitude come to?
191253839Required the latitude come to, and departure?
191253839Required the latitude failed from, and that come to?
191253839Required the latitude in, together with the di- p ° p^e reft courfe and didance?
191253839Required the latitude of the parallel?
191253839Required the latitude of the parallel?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the latitude?
191253839Required the lati¬ tude come to, courfe, and diftance run?
191253839Required the lati¬ tude come to, the courfe, and diftance made good?
191253839Required the lati¬ tude of the parallel?
191253839Required the lati¬ tude?
191253839Required the la¬ titude come to, and departure?
191253839Required the la¬ titude come to, and diftance failed?
191253839Required the longitude come to?
191253839Required the morning and afternoon times of high water at Leith, nth December 1793?
191253839Required the number of miles contained in a degree of longitude in latitude 550 58?
191253839Required the number of miles in a degree of longitude, in latitude 570 9''?
191253839Required the time at Greenwich anfwering to 5b 46''39"of May ift, at Canton, vvhofe longitude is 113 ° 2''15"E.?
191253839Required the time of high water at Dufkey Bay, 24th O&ober 1793?
191253839Required the true diffance?
191253839Required the true diftance?
191253839Required the true diftance?
191253839Required the true latitude at the time of obfervation of the great¬ er altitude?
191253839Required the true latitude?
191253839Required the true latitude?
191253839Required the true latitude?
191253839Required the true longitude of the the Longi-?
191253839Required the true longitude?
191253839Required the true rate of failing?
191253839Required the true rate of failing?
191253839Required the variation?
191253839Required the variation?
191253839Required the- courfe WinoWd and diftance on each tack?
191253839Required their difference of longitude?
191253839Required the{ hip ’s prefent place?
191253839Required without ’ the didance and departure?
191253839Required* the error of the watch?
191253839Re¬ quired the courfe and diftance on each?
191253839Re¬ quired the didance and latitude come to?
191253839Re¬ quired the error of the watch?
191253839Re¬ quired the latitude?
191253839Re¬ quired the latitude?
191253839Rifing/ 11 tlKte at Sea 68?
191253839So?
191253839Sought the true diftance?
191253839T cTT TTT T-3 T TTTr » ’ niff,* 1* 1 t 1 t t 1 1-5 TT 2”3r 7 S''''SS''7- 5-T TT?
191253839The appellation of Callipolis, Pliny and Solinus derive from the metro¬ polis of the idand, formerly a mod beautiful city, which N A X[ 7 Naxu?.
191253839The difference between the miles anfwrering to the latitudes of 570 and 58 ° is 0.89?
191253839The extent from 522 to 358 on the line of num¬ bers, will reach from 90 ° to about 43 ° y, the comple¬ ment of which q6y is the latitude required?
191253839The filhes are divided into two orders, Cartilagi- Of fifiic?.
191253839The fird i m polk ion of names was founded on differ¬ ent view''s, among different people; the mol?
191253839The fu- jireme ecclefiaflical jurifdi&ion, under the bilhop, is veft-? d in a confiftory.
191253839The king( hall do it: muft he be depos’d?
191253839The latitude of that parallel is required?
191253839The proportion of ‘ e ’ to ‘ c ’ is as 4 to 1, or as 5 to 4 j that between ‘ f ’ and ‘ a ’ is as 4 to 4?
191253839The queftion which has been fo long agitated, “ Whence is the origin of motion? ” our author com fiders as implying an abfurdity.
191253839The teno?
191253839Thefe claffes are different in number and denomina¬ tion, according to the different fyftems of naturalift?.
191253839This circumdance afforded encourage¬ ment to feveral attempts at dramatic?
191253839This houfe, which confifted oful J?
191253839This motion feems indifpenfably neceffary to the plant; for it begins as foon a?
191253839Thole who have nothing in view but, •''~lt,?
191253839Upon what is this gratuitous fuppofition founded?
191253839We may conceive without difficulty how the eye judges of relations j but how does the ear form fimilar judgements?
191253839Well, father, and how do all at home?
191253839What an immenfe difference exifts in Scotland, for inftance, be¬ tween the chiefs and the commonalty of the Highland clans?
191253839What can be more unaccountable than this denial?
191253839What is the caufe of this difference?
191253839What is the difference of latitude between Funchal, in latitude 3 2 ° 38''N, and the Cape of Good Hope, in latitude 340 29''S?
191253839What is the difference of longitude between Malkelyne ’s Ifles, in longitude 167 ° 59''E, and Olindej in longitude 350 f W?
191253839What muft the king do now?
191253839What then is this ACTIVE SOMETHING from whofe agency we get the idea of body, or whofe aftions conftitute body?
191253839What time at Greemvich anfvvers to 6h 15''at a thip in longitude 76 ° 45''W?
191253839While every gale is peace, and every grove Is melody?
191253839While they were 1 fporting I NAP[ 609] NAP Naples, fporting in th?
191253839Who is equal to Ofcar but Dermid?
191253839Would fuch abortions in the moral world be congruous to that perfection of wiflom and goodnefs which upholds and adorns the natural?
191253839Would you then tade the tranquil feene?
191253839You would not be a queen?
191253839\ S, and by obfervation is found to be in latitude 410 14''N. Required the diftance failed, and longitude come to?
191253839_* 56- Can it be ftill neceffary to adduce more con¬ vincing proofs?
191253839and difference of longitude 180 46''W.—Required the lon¬ gitude come to?
191253839and long, come to?
191253839bar, that is, which begins at the end of a meafure, and ‘ terminates in the meafure following, is called a fijnco- See Synco~ pated note( 3?
191253839by W. and made 192 miles of departure: Required the diftance run, and latitude come to?
191253839c B[?
191253839c> dt?}
191253839d[?
191253839eia, Quid?
191253839f F e[?
191253839fire mufl fleer, and the diflance run by the log at 6Inftiuments knots an hour to reach her port?
191253839fp0j4en 0f?
191253839fpeftively?
191253839left hand of the wheel is opened; but the con¬ trary way when that of the right is onened.—The watet?
191253839muft he fubmit?
191253839n.) “ Should fuch a man as I flee?
191253839o 23.6 o 47.0 I 10.4 1 33- 9 1 57- 3 2 20.7 2 44.0 39- 5 0.9 22.0 43-o 3- 9 24.6 45-o 5- 3 254 45/?
191253839or Db;$ Of G% 1 A[?
191253839or in what region upon earth have the obi’efts prefented to the eye borne a more ex- a£t refemblance to the founds which ftrike the ear?
191253839or otherwife irom C E G C to G B[?
191253839or, why the eye is rather pleafed with the waving line of Hogarth than with fharp angles and abrupt or irregular prominences?
191253839rus i? • fibres us, that they pa;d their raonarchs a kind EgyP*-.
191253839t See Ceto~ log?
191253839the altitude of the fun ’s lower limb was 8 ° 10 Required the variation of the compafs?
191253839tial have familiarized with much application the principles explained in this treatife?
191253839tlie impreflion is over, and the body continue to''move by its vis inertice, why is the body ever flopped?
191253839trill » i f 1 1 T r T- S''T3W TVS ’ 2- 3- 3 TTT To-3 T> T S t''t 2- 3: Wg- 9?
191253839tt, k, t, are termed tenues; three/3, y, termed media?
191253839which he faw his neighbour wounded with a bludgeon j Motion, what fiiould we think of his art were he to call it a v~—J contufion on the head?
191253839| Mammal, a Mtx-?/IOUSELLE, the name of an Eaft Indian tree, with white tubular flowers, which fall off every day in great plenty.
191253839| The king( hall be contented: muft: he lofe The name of king?
191253839■ to fo^ve of latitude?
191678903, fe of tl, e Word be raid t0 operations f ° f''!? 191678903 ''ar3r* t^ie dumber of rainy days is fmall- Rain''^ e? 191678903 ( a) We fay improperly, becaufe beings which w7ere created can have nothing in coototot? 191678903 * si wood- the Xochimilcas, Tepanecas, Chalcefe, Tlahuicas, and rov hfuov^yov u5 ro uvea TrunXhv, PVTS TO Mftx uvx, xvlnv, f*r, TS xnv rupcAos ’ xXX xo%v uiv czrayuTov, oovoMct roorixi dt ii? 191678903 , But has the fenfation of heat no caufe independent Their ex- of us? 191678903 -0 had^ by his royal Some foldiers and bailors, fecretly difaffeaed to tines ’''7 ™ a defg.n ° f feizin? 191678903 -n, n n-,[ 778 1 M E X al d, flrUl1$ rn''* ’ f''> 2? f* 0 kingdom of Tula, and Mexico. 191678903 /T? 191678903 0*-££ TO oAov, vTrctzxuv u& uctrjov rtov ov( pr.revrtv, s| afvvm fv ™ Xv]et? 191678903 1 wl*''-n tnefe Colours Retention raad? 191678903 10 much? 191678903 13O? 191678903 14 15 16 I? 191678903 190 Whether, if but one body exift ed, there Could be motion? 191678903 2. is the ufe of a brain which can not fee without eyes? 191678903 208 When St Auguftiwe was alked what time is? 191678903 29.34 36.67 44.01 5I*34 58.68 66.01 73- 35 88.02 117.36 M6*? 191678903 2? 191678903 3* 7 3** 36? 191678903 35. its fide AB being 20 feet? 191678903 3S? 191678903 4 U 2? ° 7 Gravity of the Air. 191678903 477 deling to their patients luch medicine? 191678903 479 his errors, and magnify his uncertainties, till his evi- Medical Ju- der.ee feern contradictory and abfurd? 191678903 4S Tlatelolco reduced, find Mo- quihuix made kin?. 191678903 514 Of PlaneFigure?.
191678903525 Of Solids, inilead of*, is changed to X,+4< y- Hy*- j?
1916789037 oftmr?
19167890370 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 8?
1916789038. the ray EFR, after refradion at R diverging from F/ are each broughfto Tf^u?
19167890386 Abftradl Of Abflrac- triangle( which is yet none of the mofl abftra6V, com- tiun and prelienfive> anc} dithcult)?
19167890390 90 Here( 39VX 3 22+ 26 X 3?
191678903? 5 Cortes was received with much feeming cordiality; Treacher?
191678903? 5 Cortes was received with much feeming cordiality; Treacher?
191678903? hat 1S their"umber.
191678903? i, formam vero, a Deo com- paratam, dixeruntf. ”^ Notes on] t is a fa(cj.
191678903?, otrog q ytvzrig, otXX. ’ e » rov y.r\ KxXatg,/xri^ txxvug t^ovrog, ug oixixg xxi* Pint.
191678903A fcandalous and indecent work, which is entitled Meurfti e/ egantic?
191678903A fphere equally divided becomes two hemi- fplieres; Does a perception, when divided in like man¬ ner, become twm demi- perceptions?
191678903A ftone exifts as well as the human mind j but has the ftone any knowledge of its owm exiftence?
191678903Again, If it ffiould be afked what is mind?
191678903An anfwer from which mode of du- it may be inferred, that Be thought the nature of/fw< fratlon!?
191678903And if it be afked how we know this?
191678903And of Empedocles, when he re¬ lates ccTrt/ Xce, Txvlct, xatxsoa?
191678903And thus, though* 5?
191678903And when we make thefe the objeds of? uj; attention, either while they Part 1.
191678903And?-?-*T4''6^=667.
191678903Anftotle, thofe objeas left in the imagination when onginally perceived?
191678903Appreiien- What is it to conceive a corporeal thing to exift?
191678903Are motives, then, real beings endowed with power and will?
191678903At what diftance is a globe of one foot diameter when it fubtends an angle of two feconds?
191678903Be it fo; and what follows?
191678903Befides, is it not alto¬ gether inconceivable, nay impoffible, that particles iffuing from the fun fhould draw the planets towards that centre?
191678903Bodies are long, broad, thick, heavy; but are length, breadth, denfity, weight, properly any thing?
191678903But do they really flow from Berkeley ’s fyftem?
191678903But having the^fortune to lofe his father foon after this method was begun to be followed, the child was negleded for fix years?
191678903But how*, we would alk, could"an animal in fuch circumftances be^^-mov- ing?
191678903But how, we beg leave to afk, is the wdiole train perceived to occupy any portion of time?
191678903But if the percipient principle''be divided, what would become of the power of percepv tion?
191678903But if this be fo, what is reminifcence?
191678903But in the Peripatetic philofophy, pictures and form?
191678903But is the difference itfelf real?
191678903But rejoins the querift, I am not inquiring what it gene ’ ratesj give me a direft idea of the point itfelf?
191678903But the queftion wdth the metaphyfician is, Whether fuch forces be real?
191678903But what is it that raifes defire?
191678903But what is truth?
191678903But would the ceafing of this energy be likewife a caufe?
191678903By what means alfo are thefe aliments to be diffolved in the( lomach when drink is withheld?
191678903Can any one be abfurd enough to affirm that the power of harmony refidts in the harpfichord, as the po- wer of perception does in the mind?
191678903Cap, z.?''
191678903Do thefe things neceffarily accompany one another, fo as that one of them can not exift without bringing all the reft along with it?
191678903Do we endeavour to form in our minds pic- inTeTffdf''r''01 ° r, rePrefentative^ages?
191678903Does he from this conclude that it is the telefcope which fees thofe fatellites, or the trumpet which hears that voice?
191678903Does the man endeavour to form in his mind a pifture or reprefentative image of the objea?
191678903Does this ranpe correfpond to the mean annual heat-, that is to lav Is the range greateft when the heat is lead, an lead when the heat is greateft?
191678903Etlielred made his brother Merowald king of Here- Mercury ford;''vho » d>1B?
191678903Figuring glory and honour to be?
191678903Flow is this done?
191678903Flow then can their being difpofed in any poflible fyftem make them one indi¬ vidual confcious being?
191678903For who has explored the higher regions oi the at¬ mofphere?
191678903God has been pleafed to raife up, by Mr Wefley, in America and Europe, a numerous fociety well known)? y the name of Methodijls.
191678903Has Mr Cooper any idea of that which attrafts and repels, or of attraftion and repulfion, abftrafted from their objefts?
191678903Has not the mind of man( fay they) an unlimited power in mou.dmg and combining its ideas?
191678903Have they any real fepa¬ late archetypes or external idiata?
191678903How does jt follow from hence, that a mind with or without ideas is the fame?
191678903How is an objea''recalled by the power of memory?
191678903How is the one paffage to be reconciled with the other?
191678903How many cubic inches does it contain?
191678903How multiplied, in fa61, are the fubjefts, even of our daily and hourly ob- fervation, which we canryat fatisfa6lorily expound?
191678903How then do I come to believe it?
191678903I f it be alked, What kind of infinity and eternity Of Infinity they are which have no relation to fpace and time?
191678903I his is all that on this fubied our natural fenfe of things leads us to believe; and is not this infalJihly true?
191678903I?, is, however, alfo highly probable, that their feel¬ ings differ exceedingly from what they are in a natural date; at leaf!
191678903If a weak motive can be refifted, why not one a little ftronger, and why not the ftrongeft?
191678903If the diameter of the bafe of a para¬ boloid be 10 and its height 1 2 feet j what is its con¬ tent?
191678903If the repofitories- of thought are already full, what can they receive?
191678903If thefe] aws were obferved the fTnM^rA^''r0116?
191678903If then it muft be firft moved itfelf, but can not itfelf move itfelf, wrhat is it that moves itfelf?
191678903If you fay he means the church, how does the chuich feed on lawns, or range in the forefl:?
191678903In a fphere whofe diameter is 2r, what is the folidity of a fegment whofe height is 4.5 inches?
191678903In a right- angled triangle ABC, thep-^ fides AB and AC, about the right angle, are 33 r feet and 56 feet} what is the length of the hypothe- nufe BC?
191678903In latitude 56 ° the heat below being 540; required the temperature of the air at the height of 803 feet?
191678903In the former, neither ofin?
191678903In the trapezium ABCD the diagonal AC is 42, and the two perpendiculars BE, DF are 16 and 18: What is its area?
191678903In this month of September 1774?
191678903Is confcioufnefs or truth extended?
191678903Is it impoflible that this aeft ftiould be, if the event had not happened?
191678903Is it not by being com¬ pared with our own exiftence?
191678903Is it the voice of thunder, or my father?
191678903Is it then a fubftance?
191678903Is it then nothing?
191678903Is it then the occafional exertion of fome fubftance?
191678903Is then folidity the bafis of thefe qualities, fo that they neceffarily refult from it?
191678903Is this reminifcence the fame wnth the former l or is it a dif¬ ferent reminifcence?
191678903Isf fion aild it not to fancy that we view it on all fides, as what may be feen, or felt, or fmelt, or tailed?
191678903Isthereabluehaze, white mill, and denfe fog?
191678903It is con-( vv) Dr Tatham having alked, with a contemptuous air, How imperfeCt and illogical is the definition of truth given by Wollafton?
191678903It is evident that the capacity or po¬ tentiality of every thing exifting muft have been from eternity; but is capacity or potentiality a real being?
191678903It is indeed eafy to conceive folidity or extenfon abftradled from any one individual objedt: but how is it done?
191678903It rifes in the mountains of Toloccan*, and after running a courfe of more than 600 miles, difcharges itfelf into the ocean in 2 2?
191678903It’.ls?
191678903Jam vero partes Dei Seri lafcivas, ini- yuas, impiaSy atque omnino damnabiles, quis ierre poteft^ nift qui prorfus infanit?
191678903Juft fo it is with refneef to vifion: the fenfation received by the eye fuggefts at once the trunk, branches, leaves, colour, figure, and/fz?
191678903Lailly, Let us fiappofe the dimenfions of the preffing fubftance to be greatly enlarged: what would then fol¬ low?
191678903Lat, jTempe 90 89 88 3?
191678903M E S f 54?]
191678903M E T A P 0,tanceScfb''menC, I f,''0 m hh 0wn: but into that notion tl, e « l, n, exr r ° n n ° “!d n0 t V**1?
191678903M E T A P I Of Abftrac- fign?
191678903M E T A?
191678903M E T E O Wind?.
191678903M E x r 7S5''''T thf ° fe?
191678903META?
191678903META?
191678903MICHAEL, or Michel,( i. e. who is like to God?'')
191678903May not the appearance of the aurora borealis be owing to the union of oxygen and hydrogen by the in¬ tervention of the electric fluid?
191678903May not this mythological genealogy be regarded as merely emblematical of their defcent from the upper regions of the atmofphere?
191678903Mercury, 5?
191678903N ° 183 191 190 189 199 192 204 i35 225 125 334 127 77 356 34?
191678903Now the angle t?
191678903Now what becomes of all this moidure?
191678903Now, what is it that this perception fuggefts to the mind?
191678903O quid agis?
191678903Of all the phyfiologers before himfelf and Plato, Ariftotle fays, without exception, TactiTijj oy.oyvwy.opov< ri rjj?
191678903Of the Sub-<( In oppofitlon to tills reafoning-, the materialifts ft a nee of a{^rrn?
191678903Of two contending motives, is it not natural to expeft that the ftronger will prevail, however little its excels may be?
191678903On what compulfion muft I?
191678903One of the former ftftnHer ° ASn andu- S ° n, a pedeftal which Supported a, iatue e^eded to him when conful, A. D. 14?
191678903Or can they exift but in fome fubftance?
191678903Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite, By bare imagination of a feaft?
191678903Or wTallow naked in December ’s fnow, By thinking on fantaftic fummer ’s heat?
191678903Or,"''re e< fea really produced, ought not the puerpera fecer tobe more common and fatal after the moft labonous deliveries?
191678903Ouidni igitur fufpicemur, effe naturam in corpore noftro viventem, praeter ammam noftram, cujus lit ammas praeceptis et juflis morem gerere?
191678903Ouis interiorem fibi naturam rerum, tam cor¬ porum, quam fpirituum, cognitam efie dixerit?
191678903Pneuma- tofi?.
191678903Q, ujs caufas fibi patere, propter quas hi vel Lili elTeclus, quos videmus quotidie contingere, a certis veniant corporibus, jure glorietur?
191678903Quis quemadmodum altera harum naturarum agat in alteram, fefe feire, aflirmet?
191678903Required the con¬ tent?
191678903Says the que- the AElive[ ut ’ 1 “ n.not aik what the properties of body are Powers of but what js the thing itfelf?
191678903So likewife the mind, by leaving out of the particular co¬ lours perceived by fenfe that which diftinguhhes them one?
191678903Square Mile, acre is to the Engliflr acre as Of Right Lines?.r:4 Angles.
191678903Such?
191678903Suppofe the diameter of the greater end to be 8, and the diameter of the leffer end 6, and the length 10, required the content?
191678903Suppofe the greater end of the fruftum to be ‘ 15, the lefs end 9, and the length 10 inches, required the content?
191678903Suppofe the hypothenufe BC to be 65 feet, and AB one of the fides about the right angle to be 33 feet; what is the length of AC the other fide?
191678903T( reivvy Qvsovg- h, «< T»i » rupx uvea Myoyhs, 7rgd]ov piv bcctrrov icieov?
191678903THAT the mind of man has no innate ideas or ion?, but comes into the world no L a truth which fmce the days of Lock has uf''very little diluted.
191678903That finite quantities, whether great or fmall?
191678903The Mefoptery- gius li Me( ran?..
191678903The boundary of the Grecian- ftadium, or courfe, was called rsy#?, and CCA?
191678903The boundary of the Grecian- ftadium, or courfe, was called rsy#?, and CCA?
191678903The circumference of a circle is ro feet, what is its diameter?
191678903The conclufion is logically inferred j but what purpofe can it poflibly ferve?
191678903The ground of the cfoub?
191678903The idea of an objeft is the apprehen- fion, view, or notion of it •, and how can this be divifible?
191678903The jeafon why the walls of an empty room do not totfhh, is that they are diflanl; but is diflance, in the abftra£I, anv thing really exifting?
191678903The king, g- reatly concerned, afked Montezuma what fhould be done to diffipate the fears of the people?
191678903The length of the parabolic fpindle AEB^A is 60, and the middle diameter E^ 34; what is the folidity?
191678903The queftlon between the matei ialiils and me EMatter °^ n0 t> Wllether^ave a real exiftence out of ■''the mind of this or that perfon?
191678903They are obvi- oufly the reverie of each other •, but are they external obje&s, or mere fenfations in the mind?
191678903This being the cafe, it may be alked up- mony- on what principle we give credit to human teftimony?''
191678903To what caufes fhall we attribute this peiio- dical change, other than the attra&ion of the fun and moon for the matter compofing.the atmofphere.?
191678903Two individuals differ, or there is a difference between them; but is diference''wdtM any real external thing?
191678903V. Aflbciaticn other as our judgements of mathematical or phyfical of Idea1;, truths?
191678903V. M E T A P Afibciation one important event to the other, and to brin?
191678903We ivould afk fuch a perfon, Whether be¬ fore the birth of Abraham, for example*, there had paft an infinite feries of generations or not?
191678903We may hence conclude, that, for each hygrometric degree, the air would require y X ttto or tyV?
191678903What are heat and cold, and where do they refide?
191678903What could have been done more to my vineyard, that I have not done?
191678903What is he to do in this cafe?
191678903What is it then that apprehends as one the whole of this extended idea?
191678903What is its content?
191678903What is its content?
191678903What is the area of a triangle ABC, F)-g lSa whofe two fides AB and AC are 30. and 40, and the included angle A is 28 ° 57''?
191678903What is the area?
191678903What is the convex furface of a cylinder whofe length AB is 20 feet, and the circumference of^ J its bafe 3 feet?
191678903What is the folid content of a cube AG, the length of whofe fide is 24 inches?
191678903What is the upright furface of a triangular pyramid, A BCD, the flant height, AE, being 2 ® feet, and each fide of the bafe 3 feet?
191678903What method can we take in fo critical a junfture?
191678903What nation is more gene¬ rous in its public inllitutions?
191678903What then fttould hinder it from defeending, and mixing with the atmofphere be- 2 1 w?
191678903What then is the bond of this union?
191678903What then is the fecond principle?
191678903What then is the obje& of fenfe when we feel heat?
191678903What then is this energy?
191678903When Mr Hume fays, “ that from the/ ry?
191678903When afked by their neighbours who they were?
191678903When an objea was he d dl real?
191678903Where does the indivi¬ dual facrifice a part of his wealth fo willingly for the benefit of the community?
191678903Where is the fpirit of patriotifm and benevolence fo prevalent?
191678903Where then are we to fix the boundary between a weak and a ftrong motive?
191678903Where¬ fore, when I looked that it ftiould bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes?
191678903Which indutlry and courage might have fav’d?
191678903Why do not we perceive external objefts in our f Religion f- eeP or m a fivoon?
191678903Why then, it will be alked, is not the equator the boundary of the two trade- winds?
191678903Why, however, does it not reafon and|i: ailce °* think about fomcthir.g or other?
191678903Will you again unknit This churliih knot of all- abhorred war, And move in that obedient orb again, Where you did give a fair and natural light?
191678903^ certainty of event as if It had been forefeen, and abfo- lately neceflary?
191678903^ planets?
191678903_ Are properties prior in the order of nature, or even in our conceptions, to the fubftances in which they inhere?
191678903__ It has been alked, Why we believe what we diftimff-* hg g ° ound ly remember?
191678903a £* rmer-?
191678903and how can wre have an idea of w;hich we are not confcious?
191678903and is it pcflible to feparate even in thought any of thefe from perception?
191678903bis fol- of th •& •1 puP an t0 bis life, and laid hold? ef„,h Z''hr dnd?d- The moment ibat their leader eye?
191678903bis fol- of th •& •1 puP an t0 bis life, and laid hold? ef„,h Z''hr dnd?d- The moment ibat their leader eye?
191678903but is it conceiveable, is it poflible, that any thing fhould be the caufe of itfelf?
191678903but, Whether they have an abfolute exiftence, diftinft from being perceiv¬ ed by God, and exterior to all minds?
191678903by which i have the? onyidtion and be¬ lief.
191678903circumftances, remained vivid and diftindt in his memo¬ ry?
191678903conceived to exift without thereby prefuppofing the ex¬ iftence of fpace, how can fpace be a property or mode of the felf- exiftent Subftance?
191678903does the mind reje£l the idea of fugar or of bitternefs, of contempt or of indiffer¬ ence?
191678903extnnfoc, o the firft caufe f. Indeed if the word, hav?
191678903famlinbna- yftS?
191678903feem intolerable, but what will not cuftom re¬ concile?
191678903i he fpicula?, gently feraped off from a iingm pod,, and mixed with fyrup or melaffes, are taken for a dofe in the morning falling.
191678903is it pofiible that thou canft make me perilh thus?
191678903it is?
191678903itdojcc 2s Train, otov xxttt to ttv^''tx[ aiv ovv ctfvfcct tyvni tipi Tramp* Metaphyf. Tov\up t> txrov revs iSo?
191678903jedt?
191678903khWS, 0 xcti wnri rev carhrov ■ xoteovUi v r^ivu n r.cti raiftrcti, ov cco''.r‘g uxcov ri?
191678903lif..? 4* X-7854X 10 3 2 24-X-/8?4 X 10 x x 10 4 ° X 3 X 2 — 2 ° 73''45^> fbe content the folid as required.
191678903n"able to be.d ” bedmthf: r;: bc Kei, he MTofl/ l,? heWealtb"bicb, b''y bad waris''SS.Sn''Sr1^^ r 767 i M E X Mexico.. a ns jcI.
191678903nl,?
191678903or if that can not be done, as furely it can not, tell me what its offspring a line is?
191678903or indeed between it and any other objedt whatever?
191678903or is the air tranfparent?
191678903or what notion have we of a panther ’s bible?
191678903or who knows wffiat may take place beyond its precimfts?
191678903or why we fhould fuppofe the exiftence of fucb a fubftance?
191678903or, if we were called upon to exolain what progrefs is, could we do it better than by faving that it is motion/ rw; lome- thing to fomething?
191678903or, to fpeak in plain language, can we conceive folidity as feparated from all extenjion and all weight?
191678903own fpontaneous energy, other bodies are fudden} brought into exiftence: would it then acquire, the idea of motion?
191678903p. HO, 2 8?
191678903r, rm otto too xiBfov yivopm?
191678903ss?
191678903t?''
191678903t]ie country?
191678903tangjkle 0^-e(q.?
191678903the anfwer Ihould be«nn^ the fame as if it were alked in what confifts fimliltude unjer- or equality?
191678903the content of the conic fruftum FH hf equal to nh(? •+*•+?
191678903the content of the conic fruftum FH hf equal to nh(? •+*•+?
191678903the tranf-?
191678903therefore agrees to all other triangles which have neither a right angle nor two equal fides?
191678903things without a fu1 iedt?
191678903verthelefs, as thefe can not always be difcovered, the phyfician ought to proceed in every cafe of jaundice as''1?
191678903we beg leave,1 in our turn, to a(k thefe gentlemen, What? c tfip ufe of a brain which can not fee without eyes?
191678903we beg leave,1 in our turn, to a(k thefe gentlemen, What? c tfip ufe of a brain which can not fee without eyes?
191678903what then, we may be permitted to a(k,''is the import of the word we in this fentence?
191678903what ‘^ht kn0 m ‘ ‘ ha, t, h>= “ ttt of Madrid, in order to rel„7(h cru7tv „ f, td‘eadful ”*?
191678903where is the potentate who doth not glory in being numbered among our attendants?
191678903which his belief him ed to the u j?''
191678903would they not rather of neceffity drive them to a greater diftance?
191678903x\CB is 10, and its altitude CD,( that is, the greatefl line that can be drawn in the fegment perpendicular to the bafe AB) is 4: What is its area?
191678903« « nXxrm vdheov 4i< pWY, xvuxx''TXi Zvptpo ™ dvrxy.ii vTrorft^v Bvyov?
191678903“ But what right have you to exercife the epifcopal office? ” To me the moft manifeft and clear.
191678903“ It i^ fpeckled wh^ C0l0ui.f?>''s M- Sage, granulated and points f, nmg’- a”d PyritOUS points.
191678903“ It is the praftic?
191678903“ What can it mean( fays he), but that we muft leave this country, and find ourfelves another?
191678903“ When it is affied( fays this philofophical prelate*) though it in what perfonal identity confiils?
191678903“ When we fay, that one being aft?
191678903■-36 as?''