The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 44A. Constable, 1826 |
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Page 13
... manner , timing and effi- * Duppa . Cer- + It is not to be inferred from this and the like passages , that G. doubted the previous communication of Morley to Clarendon . He uses such language as a reproach to the Chancellor for his ...
... manner , timing and effi- * Duppa . Cer- + It is not to be inferred from this and the like passages , that G. doubted the previous communication of Morley to Clarendon . He uses such language as a reproach to the Chancellor for his ...
Page 17
Or Critical Journal. letters ; making his admission at last in the hurried manner of an unwilling witness . The decisive words , however , were at length extorted from him , ' WHEN IT CEASES TO BE A SECRET , I KNOW NOBODY WILL BE GLAD OF ...
Or Critical Journal. letters ; making his admission at last in the hurried manner of an unwilling witness . The decisive words , however , were at length extorted from him , ' WHEN IT CEASES TO BE A SECRET , I KNOW NOBODY WILL BE GLAD OF ...
Page 33
... manner when he speaks in the person of another man . Conclusions from internal evidence have so often been contra- dicted by experience , that prudent inquirers seldom rely on them when there are any other means of forming a judgment ...
... manner when he speaks in the person of another man . Conclusions from internal evidence have so often been contra- dicted by experience , that prudent inquirers seldom rely on them when there are any other means of forming a judgment ...
Page 48
... manner , the Amboyna tooth- powder must depend upon the Herald and the Morning Post . Unfortunately , the system of ... manners with the loose- ness and grossness of the age . A single instance of such scurvy jests , addressed by a king ...
... manner , the Amboyna tooth- powder must depend upon the Herald and the Morning Post . Unfortunately , the system of ... manners with the loose- ness and grossness of the age . A single instance of such scurvy jests , addressed by a king ...
Page 53
... manner . Hear upon this point the judicious Locke , • But if ⚫ such a man cannot be got , who speaks good Latin , and being ⚫ able to instruct your son in all these parts of knowledge , will undertake it by this method ; the next best ...
... manner . Hear upon this point the judicious Locke , • But if ⚫ such a man cannot be got , who speaks good Latin , and being ⚫ able to instruct your son in all these parts of knowledge , will undertake it by this method ; the next best ...
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Popular passages
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Page 5 - The Family Shakspeare ; in which nothing is added to the Original Text ; but those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud.
Page 13 - Mrs. Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry, in which the Elements of that Science are familiarly explained and illustrated by Experiments.
Page 10 - COL. HAWKER'S INSTRUCTIONS to YOUNG SPORTSMEN in all that relates to Guns and Shooting.
Page 12 - FIRST STEPS TO BOTANY, Intended as popular Illustrations of the Science, leading to its study as a branch of general education. By JL DRUMMOND, MD 4th Edit. 12mo. with numerous Woodcuts, 9s.
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Page 243 - That these made war with Bera king of Sodom, and with Birsha king of Gomorrah, Shinab king of Admah, and Shemeber king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela, which is Zoar.
Page 253 - The Surrender of Napoleon. Being the Narrative of the Surrender of Buonaparte, and of his residence on board HMS Bellerophon...
Page 68 - And though the Greek learning grew in credit amongst the Romans, towards the end of their commonwealth, yet it was the Roman tongue that was made the study of their youth: their own language they were to make use of, and therefore it was their own language they were instructed and exercised in.
Page 68 - But more particularly to determine the proper season for grammar; I do not see how it can reasonably be made any one's study, but as an introduction to rhetoric : when it is thought time to put any one upon the care of polishing his tongue, and of speaking better than the illiterate, then is the time for him to be instructed in the rules of grammar, and not before. For grammar being to teach men not to speak, but to speak correctly, and according to the exact rules of the tongue...