Windsor Park Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER PAGE.
— from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare
Vides venustam mulierem, fulgidum habentem oculum, vultu hilari coruscantem, eximium quendam aspectum et decorem praese ferentem, urentem mentem tuam, et concupiscentiam agentem; cogita terram esse id quod amas, et quod admiraris stercus, et quod te urit, &c., cogita illam jam senescere jam rugosam cavis genis, aegrotam; tantis sordibus intus plena est, pituita, stercore; reputa quid intra nares, oculos, cerebrum gestat, quas sordes, &c. 5744 .
— from The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton
Disons que, dans mon cas, l'utilisation du support papier est plus sélective.
— from Entretiens / Interviews / Entrevistas by Marie Lebert
—Pronto hemos de saberlo, porque el pueblo se acaba.
— from Doña Perfecta by Benito Pérez Galdós
9.—LOS EXTRANJEROS EN AMÉRICA (to the vocabulary section) Vengan en hora buena aquéllos que penetran al seno de la República por el pórtico siempre abierto del preámbulo constitucional, [1] dispuestos a labrar su propio bienestar, contribuyendo al engrandecimiento común al amparo de leyes cuya generosidad sólo podría compararse a la del surco dilecto, que retribuye sin usuras el sudor de las frentes; vengan en hora buena esos inmigrantes sanos y buenos, que incorporan nuevos glóbulos rojos a las arterias de la República y de cada uno de los cuales podría decirse, parafraseando un concepto ajeno, que es como una letra en el gran abecedario del progreso nacional; vengan en hora buena esos extranjeros como Burmeister, como Jacques, como Berg, como Gould, como Groussac, que han ilustrado el pensamiento de varias generaciones argentinas, y cuyo paso por los bufetes de la pública enseñanza nos permite afirmar que la República diluída en la triunfal policromía de un potente organismo joven, es americana por el rígido concepto de su propia autonomía; española por su tradición y por su lengua; alemana por su ejército; inglesa por la pujanza de sus grandes capitales; francesa por sus tendencias literarias e italiana por el hondo y permanente amor a las cosas altas y las cosas bellas.
— from Heath's Modern Language Series: The Spanish American Reader by Ernesto Nelson
a hint einen Zeugen aufrufen to call a witness einer Frist bewusst sein; eine Frist beachten to be aware of a time limit einer Person Vollmacht geben give a person full powers einer Petition stattgeben to allow a petition einer Sache großen
— from Mr. Honey's Medium Business Dictionary (German-English) by Winfried Honig
Herbere , sb. garden of herbs, S3; herber , PP, CM; erber , PP; erberes , pl. , S3. Herbergage , sb. lodging, S2, C2, C3.—AF. herbergage , from OF. herberge , encampment (Roland).
— from A Concise Dictionary of Middle English from A.D. 1150 to 1580 by A. L. (Anthony Lawson) Mayhew
FOOTNOTES: [114] The following from the Wichita Eagle is noteworthy because in the Kansas campaign the year before, and in all previous years, it had been abusive beyond description and had at all times put every possible stumbling-block in the way of woman suffrage and berated all who advocated it: "What an experience Miss Anthony has had!
— from The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 2 of 2) Including Public Addresses, Her Own Letters and Many From Her Contemporaries During Fifty Years by Ida Husted Harper
Dane and Saxon fought it out—the Briton from "the Celtic fringe" occasionally interfering—with all the hearty ill-will of blood relations, and as they fought shaped out a very good people, partly English, partly Saxon, partly Danish, and in the mountains partly British.
— from England by Frank Fox
"Seeing," says he, "that you are perfect, entertain perfect sentiments of virtue: for God is ready to bestow on you who desire to do well."
— from The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints. January, February, March by Alban Butler
Cuando la niña era aún muy pequeñita, el padre se vió obligado a ir a la gran ciudad, capital del Imperio.
— from A First Spanish Reader by Erwin W. (Erwin William) Roessler
Does anybody sing Schubert's songs nowadays, or are they invariably left to the violins, which can interpret their "eternal passion, eternal pain," so thrillingly?
— from Lippincott's Magazine, September, 1885 by Various
I'm so grateful to get my dear girls safely home again that I hardly know what I'm about,” said Aunt Plenty, embracing Phebe so heartily that she could not feel left out in the cold and stood there with her black eyes shining through the happiest tears.
— from Rose in Bloom A Sequel to "Eight Cousins" by Louisa May Alcott
For life was pleasant enough, pleasanter since her mother and aunts had left off school-keeping; for Emberance did not like teaching, and preferred the various interests of domestic life.
— from Kingsworth; or, The Aim of a Life by Christabel R. (Christabel Rose) Coleridge
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