The Analectic Magazine, Band 91817 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 69
Seite 11
... king occasion to remark that this species of reasoning , perhaps , one may deny to be founded on the relation of cause and ef- fect , ' and subjoining that he shall not dispute about a word , ' - we think a due regard to self ...
... king occasion to remark that this species of reasoning , perhaps , one may deny to be founded on the relation of cause and ef- fect , ' and subjoining that he shall not dispute about a word , ' - we think a due regard to self ...
Seite 84
... king Charles I. of England , -Whalley , Goffe , and Dixwell , -contrived to secure them- selves , till death , from the apprehension of their pursuers . President Stiles , of Yale college , published in 1794 an interesting account of ...
... king Charles I. of England , -Whalley , Goffe , and Dixwell , -contrived to secure them- selves , till death , from the apprehension of their pursuers . President Stiles , of Yale college , published in 1794 an interesting account of ...
Seite 87
... king of Spain named a junta , charged with the duty of forming a plan for arranging and establishing general education and public instruction . The principal universities of the king- dom , as Salamanca , Valladolid , and Alcale de ...
... king of Spain named a junta , charged with the duty of forming a plan for arranging and establishing general education and public instruction . The principal universities of the king- dom , as Salamanca , Valladolid , and Alcale de ...
Seite 141
... king of the Nootkians , first , in his visiting costume , and , secondly , in the act of har- pooning a whale . All the interest of the volume is , therefore , derived solely from the nature of the facts which it contains . Of these we ...
... king of the Nootkians , first , in his visiting costume , and , secondly , in the act of har- pooning a whale . All the interest of the volume is , therefore , derived solely from the nature of the facts which it contains . Of these we ...
Seite 142
... king uttered nothing ; but his countenance spoke daggers ; and John frequently observed him rub down his wind - pipe , -in order ( as he said afterwards ) to suppress his heart , which kept rising and choking him . On the morning of the ...
... king uttered nothing ; but his countenance spoke daggers ; and John frequently observed him rub down his wind - pipe , -in order ( as he said afterwards ) to suppress his heart , which kept rising and choking him . On the morning of the ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Accessus Algebra appear basalt called camels captain Caracas cause character College colour common considerable course crystals disease earth Editor effect England English epistemia Essay established eyes fact feet former France Franklin French gazometer give Greece hand honour human hundred inoculation institution island Jewitt Junius king knowledge La Guayra labour language late letter Lord Lord Byron manner Maquina mathematical Mazères means ment miles mind mineralogy minerals mountains nature never night Nootkians object observations occasion original perhaps Pernambuco person Philadelphia philosophical phylarch plane sailing present principles produced published readers reason Recife remarks respect river Robespierre says seems side Sidi Hamet small pox soon species suppose thing tion Tombuctoo town travelling tumulus vaccine variolous volume whole words writer Yale College