The following verbs are used with object clauses of purpose.
— from Latin for Beginners by Benjamin L. (Benjamin Leonard) D'Ooge
We shall venture to propose, that pain and pleasure are not only not necessarily dependent for their existence on their mutual diminution or removal, but that, in reality, the diminution or ceasing of pleasure does not Page 129 operate like positive pain; and that the removal or diminution of pain, in its effect, has very little resemblance to positive pleasure.
— from The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 01 (of 12) by Edmund Burke
In order to this, suppose any mass of matter, of which the parts are contiguous and connected, to be placed before us; it is plain we must attribute a perfect identity to this mass, provided all the parts continue uninterruptedly and invariably the same, whatever motion or change of place we may observe either in the whole or in any of the parts.
— from A Treatise of Human Nature by David Hume
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— from Daemonologie. by King of England James I
But indeed, while Elinor remained so well assured within herself of being really beloved by Edward, it required no other consideration of probabilities to make it natural that Lucy should be jealous; and that she was so, her very confidence was a proof.
— from Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen
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— from The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot
So this Bill had several degrees of calling of Parliaments, in case the King, and then the Council, and then the Lord Chancellor, and then the Sheriffes, should fail to do it.
— from The Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete by Samuel Pepys
Of course, our poor Clifford being in so unhappy a state of mind, I cannot think of urging an interview at present.
— from The House of the Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne
They are probably as temperate as any other class of people on the face of the earth, honest in their business intercourse, moral in their thoughts, words, and deeds, and distinguished for their faithfulness in performing the duties of religion.
— from Myths of the Cherokee Extract from the Nineteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology by James Mooney
They are merely a couple of chunks of plaster of Paris.
— from What Is Man? and Other Essays by Mark Twain
He it was who stained the vine-clad Mysian plain with the dark blood of Telephos that he shed thereon, and made for the sons of Atreus a safe return across the sea, and delivered Helen, when that he had cut asunder with his spear the sinews of Troy, even the men who kept him back as he plied the work of slaughterous battle on the plain, the strength of Memnon and high-hearted Hektor, and other chiefs of pride.
— from The Extant Odes of Pindar Translated with Introduction and Short Notes by Ernest Myers by Pindar
The conditions that most commonly result in poor [358] lubrication are: Insufficient oil in the engine crank-case or sump, broken or clogged oil pipes, screen at filter filled with lint or dirt, broken oil pump, or defective oil-pump drive.
— from Aviation Engines: Design—Construction—Operation and Repair by Victor Wilfred Pagé
We younger sons, indeed, declared bitter war against the mother-country long before our conservative old province ever dreamed of secession.
— from Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill by Winston Churchill
Against such pests he has also six infallible recipes--to wit, a mosquito net over the bed; sprigs of fern hung up for the flies to settle on; a bowl filled with a mixture of milk and hare's gall, or with the juice of raw onions, which will kill them; a bottle containing a rag dipped in honey, or else a string dipped in honey to hang up; fly whisks to drive them away; and closing up windows with oiled cloth or parchment.
— from Medieval People by Eileen Power
We, therefore, your majesty's most humble Commons assembled in parliament, following the example of this worthy case of our ancestors, and out of a duty of those for whom we serve, finding that your majesty, without advice or consent of parliament, hath lately, in time of peace, set both greater impositions, and far more in number, than any your noble ancestors did ever in time of war, have, with all humility, presumed to present this most just and necessary petition unto your majesty, that all impositions set without the assent of parliament may be quite abolished and taken away; and that your majesty, in imitation likewise of your noble progenitors, will be pleased, that a law be made during this session of parliament, to declare that all impositions set, or to be set upon your people, their goods or merchandises, save only by common assent in parliament, are and shall be void."
— from Constitutional History of England, Henry VII to George II. Volume 1 of 3 by Henry Hallam
On reaching Calais, after a somewhat rough passage, his ears were greeted with the "very old cry" of "Passeports, Messieurs!"
— from Charles Bradlaugh: a Record of His Life and Work, Volume 1 (of 2) With an Account of his Parliamentary Struggle, Politics and Teachings. Seventh Edition by Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner
"For awhile our only conception of power, is in visible manifestations or feelings, but there comes a time when 'to be alone with silence is to be alone with God,' when joy is unutterable, and love the very potency of silence, when we wait with bated breath and let the divine Thought surge through us, when we put away all material beliefs and stand glorified in the 'secret of His Presence.'
— from The Right Knock A Story by Helen Van-Anderson
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