It contains every religious sentiment, all the grand ethics which visit in turn each noble poetic mind. . . .
— from Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda
no permite (o más exactamente, no permitía, mientras no se promulgó la ley de reserva federal) imitar los procedimientos europeos descriptos.
— from Heath's Modern Language Series: The Spanish American Reader by Ernesto Nelson
Ergo judicium nihil est nisi publica merces.
— from The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton
Advanced Coating & Surface Technology, Electronic Materials Technology News, Flame Retardancy News, High Tech Ceramics News, Innovator's Digest, Technology Access Report, Inside R&D, Japan Science Scan, New Technology Week, Optical Materials & Engineering News, Performance Materials, Surface Modification Technology News, Genetic Technology News, Battery & Ev Technology, and much more.
— from The Online World by Odd De Presno
In this work Page 87 occurs the passage: “In the universe there exists no primary matter devoid of the immaterial principle; and no immaterial principle apart from primary matter”; and although the two are never separated “the immaterial principle [as Chou Tzŭ explains] is what is previous to form, while primary matter is what is subsequent to form,” the idea being that the two are different manifestations of the same mysterious force from which all things proceed.
— from Myths and Legends of China by E. T. C. (Edward Theodore Chalmers) Werner
Soon might'st thou tell me, where in secret here The dastard lurks, all trembling with his fear: Swung round and round, and dash'd from rock to rock, His battered brains should on the pavement smoke No ease, no pleasure my sad heart receives, While such a monster as vile Noman lives.'
— from The Odyssey by Homer
[271] ut, cum c, Edd.; ut ne, cum B H a b. [272] et non perfecisset MSS.; del. Muretus; bracketed by Edd.
— from De Officiis by Marcus Tullius Cicero
forligerwīf (-ego) n. prostitute , MH 140 19 .
— from A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary For the Use of Students by J. R. Clark (John R. Clark) Hall
Donde hay indios, el europeo no puede medrar, pues la vida de éste reclama un salario más alto que el que al indígena se paga.
— from Heath's Modern Language Series: The Spanish American Reader by Ernesto Nelson
The perfection of oratory is like the perfection of anything else; natural power must be aided by art.
— from Phaedrus by Plato
CICERO—De Oratore I. Translated by E. N. P. Moor , M.A., Assistant Master at Clifton. 3s.
— from Kitty Alone: A Story of Three Fires (vol. 3 of 3) by S. (Sabine) Baring-Gould
“Salvator meus luget etiam nunc peccata mea; Salvator meus lætari non potest, donec ego in iniquitate permaneo.
— from Orthodoxy: Its Truths And Errors by James Freeman Clarke
This impression has, pecuniarily, been heavily against us, as it enters no philanthropic mind to extend a generosity to the Red Cross, any more than to the War, or State, or Navy Departments, or any other branch of protected government service.
— from The Red Cross in Peace and War by Clara Barton
Cur ergo non possum mobilitatem illi formæ suæ concedere, magisque quod totus labatur mundus, cujus finis ignoratur scirique nequit, et quæ apparent in cœlo, perinde se habere ac si ..."
— from A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I by Augustus De Morgan
174 M " y fa " s fa " s fa " s st " dau's dau no-yeh′ M " y mo E " n táy (P. and S.) M " y mo, g't or lit. 175 M " y fa " s fa " s fa " str " rs " dau's dau ( ms ) ah′-je M " y elder str E " n tămăkăy b, tăngăy? M " y str, elder or younger 176 M " y fa " s fa " s fa " str " rs " rs " dau's dau ha-soh′-neh M " y niece E " n mărŭmăkăl M " y niece 177 M " y fa " s fa " s fa " str " rs " rs " rs " dau's dau ha-yä′-da M " y GD E " n pêrtti M " y GD 178 M " y mo's mo's mo's bro hoc′-sote M " y GF E " n irandám păddăn M " y 2d GF 179 M " y mo " smo " s mo " s bro's son hoc′-sote M " y GF E " n păddăn (P. or S.) M " y GF, g't or lit. 180 M " y mo " smo " s mo " sb " son's son hoc-no′-seh M " y uncle E " n mămăn M " y uncle 181 M " y mo " smo " s mo " sb " os " son's son ( ms ) ah-găre′-seh M " y cousin E " n măitŭnăn M " y cousin 182 M " y mo " smo " s mo " sb " os " so " son's son ( fs ) ha-ah′-wuk M " y son E " n mărŭmăkăn M " y nephew 183 M " y mo " smo " s mo " sb " os " so " so
— from Ancient Society Or, Researches in the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery, through Barbarism to Civilization by Lewis Henry Morgan
Aggressive action establishing naval predominance might have prevented Napoleon's brilliant invasion and conquest of Italy; Spain would then have steered clear of the French alliance; and the Egyptian campaign would have been impossible.
— from A History of Sea Power by William Oliver Stevens
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