of induô , put on ], clothed in-eô, -îre, -iî, -itus [ in , into , + eô , go ], go into; enter upon, begin , with acc.
— from Latin for Beginners by Benjamin L. (Benjamin Leonard) D'Ooge
of induō , put on ], clothed in-eō, -īre, -iī, -itus [ in , into , + eō , go ], go into; enter upon, begin , with acc.
— from Latin for Beginners by Benjamin L. (Benjamin Leonard) D'Ooge
The sun-dial was an important part of every great garden in early times.
— from The Old Furniture Book, with a Sketch of Past Days and Ways by N. Hudson Moore
The safety of human life was upon the men who forged the steel, and they forged honor into every great girder, into every rod and bolt and plate.
— from The Modern Railroad by Edward Hungerford
The open stalls, which then occupied the place of shops, were adorned by a display of their richest wares, decorated with wreaths of a thousand bright colors;—steel harness from the forges of Milan; rich velvets from the looms of Genoa; drinking-cups and ewers of embossed gold, glittered in every booth.
— from The Knights of England, France, and Scotland by Henry William Herbert
Cumberland is retreating to the sea; the Russians are ever gaining ground in East Prussia; there is nothing, now, to prevent the remaining French army from marching on Berlin; and the Swedes have issued from Stralsund.
— from With Frederick the Great: A Story of the Seven Years' War by G. A. (George Alfred) Henty
The disks were placed all in one plane with their centres all on one horizontal line, and the cylinders with their axes also in line, and a single sliding bar, with a fork for each globe, gave in each case the displacement y from the centre of the disk.
— from Lord Kelvin: An account of his scientific life and work by Andrew Gray
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