A New Dictionary of the English Language: Combining Explanation with Etymology and Illustrated by Quotations from the Best Authorities, Zväzok 1William Pickering, 1844 - 2222 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 100.
Strana
... learned and scientific persons of the day have borne their parts , my own individual portion has never been denied its full meed of esteem . The opinions , indeed , which have at various intervals in the progress of publication been ...
... learned and scientific persons of the day have borne their parts , my own individual portion has never been denied its full meed of esteem . The opinions , indeed , which have at various intervals in the progress of publication been ...
Strana
... learned and sagacious scholars , and which have passed the not uncommon routine of being recognised and admired — neglected and forgotten . It is one of those , which they themselves have employed to very little purpose , and of which ...
... learned and sagacious scholars , and which have passed the not uncommon routine of being recognised and admired — neglected and forgotten . It is one of those , which they themselves have employed to very little purpose , and of which ...
Strana
... learned in- dustry has brought together for the benefit of succeeding labourers . I have adopted or rejected his and their opinions , according to the best of my own judgment upon their merits ; where I had any conclusion of my own ...
... learned in- dustry has brought together for the benefit of succeeding labourers . I have adopted or rejected his and their opinions , according to the best of my own judgment upon their merits ; where I had any conclusion of my own ...
Strana
... learned and a very sensible writer of his own time * against lexicographers in general , who remove the primary sense out of its place , and break that chain of significations , so neces- sary to preserve consistency , and relieve the ...
... learned and a very sensible writer of his own time * against lexicographers in general , who remove the primary sense out of its place , and break that chain of significations , so neces- sary to preserve consistency , and relieve the ...
Strana 7
... learned scholar , or of the sanguine student whom no difficulties could dishearten . The middle path , in which I have persevered , though it is obstructed by no formidable impediments to an easy progress , still leads by ascending ...
... learned scholar , or of the sanguine student whom no difficulties could dishearten . The middle path , in which I have persevered , though it is obstructed by no formidable impediments to an easy progress , still leads by ascending ...
Obsah
18 | |
57 | |
95 | |
122 | |
154 | |
163 | |
186 | |
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487 | |
533 | |
546 | |
595 | |
636 | |
714 | |
715 | |
796 | |
215 | |
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263 | |
295 | |
354 | |
438 | |
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482 | |
816 | |
836 | |
880 | |
887 | |
948 | |
1003 | |
1069 | |
1078 | |
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applied arms Battle of Agincourt body Brunne called cause Chaucer Christ church Cotgrave Cowper death doth Drayton Dryden earth euery eyes Faerie Queene fear Fletch Gloucester Goth Gower grace Hall hand hath haue heart heaven herte Hist Holland holy Homer honour Iliad Jonson king Knightes Tale kyng Livy lond Lord loue Menage Milton mind Mirror for Magistrates nature neuer night Ovid Paradise Lost Persones Tale Piers Plouhman Plinie Plutarch Poly-Olbion Pope Pref prince Prologue quath quotation sayd Shakespeare shal shew shulde Skinner soul Spenser Surrey thee ther thereof theyr thing thou thynges Troil tyme Udal unto verb VIII Virgil vnder vnto Vossius vpon Vulgar Errours Wachter whan Wiclif wolde word