For the seven following months, hardly a day passed, that I did not visit some one of the members of government, or branches of the royal family, in order to gain their influence in our behalf; but the only benefit resulting was, their encouraging promises preserved us from despair, and induced a hope of the speedy termination of our difficulties, which enabled us to bear our distresses better than we otherwise should have done.
— from Fox's Book of Martyrs Or A History of the Lives, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths of the Primitive Protestant Martyrs by John Foxe
Drobisch describes (Empirische Psychol., p. 95) the case of a young man whom he examined.
— from The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1 (of 2) by William James
if Pesgi, v. to feed, to fatten; to grow fat Pesgiad, n. a feeding, a fattening Peswch, n. a cough Pesychiad, n. a coughing Pesychlyd, a. troubled with cough Pesychlys, n. the coltsfoot Pesychu, v. to force out; to cough Petrus, a. apt to start; hesitating Petrusad, n. a hesitating Petrusder, n. hesitation, doubt Petrusen, n. a startler; partridge Petrusi, n. startling; hesitation Petruso, v. to startle; to hesitate Petrusol, a startling; hesitating Petryael, Petryal, n. a square: a. square Peth, n. a thing, a something; a quantity, a part Peuad, Peuant, n. a panting; a pausing Peuo, v. to spread out; to pant, to puff; to pause, to hesitate Peuol, a. panting; pausing Peuawr, a. hourly: adv. hourly Peues, n. place of rest; a country Peufer, a. whining; neighing Peuferu, v. to whine; to neigh Peunoeth, a. nocturnal, nightly Peunos, a. nocturnal, nightly Pi, n. state of being in, a pie Pia, n. a pie, a magpie Piant, n. possession, ownership Piau, v. to own, to possess Pib, n. a pipe; a tube; a lax Pibellu, n. a pipe, a duct, a tube Pibelliad, n. a piping; a forming of a pipe Pibellog, a. having a pipe Pibellu, v. to pipe; to form a pipe Pibellwr, n. pipe man, a piper Piben, n. a pipe, a duct, a flue Piblyd, a. apt to squirt, squirting Piblys, n. the flixweed Pibo, v. to pipe; to squirt Pibol, a. piping; squirting Pibonwy, n. icicles, sleet Pibori, n. a piping; a budding: v. to pipe; to tud Piborig, a. piping; budding Pibydd, n. piper, pipe player Pibyddiaeth, n. pipe-playing Picell, n. a dart, a javelin Picellai, n. a dart thrower Picellu, v. to throw a dart Picffon, n. a pike-staff Picfforch, n. a pitchfork Piciad, n. a darting, a going Picio, v. to dart, to fly suddenly Picwd, n. the prickled dog, the hound-fish Picyn, n. a piggin, a noggin Picynaid, n. a piggin-full Pid, n. a tapering point Piff, n. puff, sudden blast Piffio, v. to puff, to whiff Pig, n. a point, a pike, a nip; a bill, a beak; the pip Pigawglys, n. the spinach Pigfain, a. sharp-pointed Pigfan, n. mark of a point Pigfaniad, n. a puncturing Pigfanu, v. to puncture Pigfaniad, n. accumination Pigfeinio, v. to accuminate Pigin, n. picking pain, stitch Pigion, n. pickings; selections Pigl, n. the herb hound’s-tongue Pigo, v. to prick, to pick, to peck Pigoden, n. a pickle: a shrew Pigog, a. pointed, full of points, prickly Pigoga, n. spinach Pigwn, n. a cone; a beacon Pigwrn, n. pinacle, spire Pigyn, n. a stitch, a pleurisy Pigyrnu, v. to spire, to briskle up Pil, n. what hovers; a serjeant; a peal; a creek Pila, n. a finch Pilia, n. a moth, a butterfly Pilaid, a. transient, frail; mean Pilan, n. a sparrow-hawk Pilc, n. what turns about Pilcod, n. minnows Pilcota, v. to catch minnows Pildin, n. a gall by riding Pilden, n. cuticle, rind; fringe Pilenu, v. to form a cuticle Piler, n. a pillar, a column Pileru, v. to build upon pillars, to erect pillars Pilg, n. a vessel of bark; a laver Piliad, n. a paring, a peeling Pilio, v. to peel, to pare, to strip Pilion, n. peelings, strippings Pilionen, n. a thin peel, a film Pilo, n. rod of an apparitor Pilus, a. transient, frail; mean Pilwrn, n. a small dart Pilyn, n. a tegument: a clout; a pillion Pilynu, v. to put on a vesture Pilysyn, n. a robe, a pelisse Pill, n. a pivot; a shaft; a stem, a stock; a tong; a stronghold; a frame; a heater Pillgorn, n. the neck joint Pillgun, n. a plug, a stopple Pillio, v. to shaft, to peg Pillwydd, n. dead standing trees Pillyn, n. a small stem; a peg Pin, n. a pin; a stile, a pen Pinc, n. a sprig; a finch: a smart, brisk; gay; fine Pincen, n. a sprig; a spray Pincio, v. to cover with sprigs Piniwn, n. a gable end Pinwydd, n. pine wood Pioden, n. magpie, pie Piogen, n. a pie.
— from A Pocket Dictionary: Welsh-English by William Richards
Nor do I fear any one except Paul Petrovitch.
— from Fathers and Sons by Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev
Mr. Nickleby’s income, at the period of his marriage, fluctuated between sixty and eighty pounds per annum .
— from Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens
poste , m. , lieu où l'on est placé par ordre.
— from French Conversation and Composition by Harry Vincent Wann
Platonic bodies; cube, rhomboid; tetrahedron, pentahedron, hexahedron, octahedron, dodecahedron, icosahedron, eicosahedron; prism, pyramid; parallelopiped; curb roof, gambrel roof, mansard roof.
— from Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget
The lupanars at Pompeii were distinguished by a sign over the street door, representing the erect phallus, painted or carved, and having the words underneath, "Hie habitat félicitas.
— from Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism With an Essay on Baal Worship, on the Assyrian Sacred "Grove," and Other Allied Symbols by Thomas Inman
Nothing was remembered by that easily pacified people but his great misfortunes and his steady fidelity to his and their religion.
— from A Popular History of Ireland : from the Earliest Period to the Emancipation of the Catholics - Volume 2 by Thomas D'Arcy McGee
tō habbanne (-enne) tō libbanne (-enne) tō sęcganne (-enne) Present Participle.
— from Anglo-Saxon Grammar and Exercise Book with Inflections, Syntax, Selections for Reading, and Glossary by C. Alphonso (Charles Alphonso) Smith
Among them, eight patients presented themselves who had at different periods of their lives had the cow-pox.
— from The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology) by Various
On Monday morning the exploring party pushed through the surf, and landed December 22, 1622 upon a rock on the main.
— from The Pictorial Field-Book of the Revolution, Vol. 1 (of 2) or, Illustrations, by Pen And Pencil, of the History, Biography, Scenery, Relics, and Traditions of the War for Independence by Benson John Lossing
To any one who had watched, day by day, month by month, the unconscionable plotting for these claims, the decision was a lamentable denial of every principle put for [Pg 360] ward during the war.
— from An American Diplomat in China by Paul S. (Paul Samuel) Reinsch
Once a Greek, an infamous Greek, had been hanged in their town for an intolerable crime of cruelty committed on board ship; and somehow, ever since then, all foreigners, particularly swarthy foreigners, seemed in their eyes peculiarly prone to atrocious cruelties.
— from The Last Call: A Romance (Vol. 1 of 3) by Richard Dowling
Two regiments could not entirely prevent poaching, but two troops were very successful, and the boys had found sections of the American Wonderland exactly as primitive as when the lonely trapper Coulter made his famous journey through it.
— from Frank Merriwell's Bravery by Burt L. Standish
The same may be said of all vegetable growths, each particular plant having its peculiar purposes to fulfill, and all together acting as purifiers of the air for the benefit of man and lower animals.
— from Plain Facts for Old and Young by John Harvey Kellogg
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