n. diversifying Amryfalu, v. to diversify Amryfath, a. miscellaneous Amryfawl, a. arrogant, haughty Amryfeiliad, n. variation Amryfiad, n. excessiveness Amryfodd, a. of various modes Amryfoldeb, n. arrogance Amryfu, v. to commit excess Amryfus, a. faulty; excessive Amryfusedd, n. excess; over sight; a falling out Amryfuseddu, v. to fall out Amryfwyd, n. variety of viands Amrygant, n. a circling rim Amrygar, a. loved on all sides Amrygasgliad, n. a complex Amrygoll, n. loss every way Amrygur, n. plain in every way Amrygwyn, n. great tribulation Amryhollt, a. having many clefts Amrylais, a. of divers sounds Amrylaw, a. of various hands Amrylawr, a. of several floors Amrylef, a. of many tones Amryliw, a. of various colours Ararylon, a. pleased various ways Amrylun, a. of divers forms Amrylys, n. mixt herbage Amrynerth, a. multipotent Amrysedd, n. excess on all sides Amryson, n. contention, v. content, to debate Amrysongar, a. contentious Amrysongarwch, n. contentiousness Amrysoniad, n. a contending Amrysonol, a. contending Amryw, a. sundry, divers, various Amrywaith, n. variegated work Amrywedd, a. of various aspects Amrywellt, n. variety of grass Amrywiad, n. diversification Amrywiaeth, n. variety Amrywiaethu, v. to diversify Amrywiaeth, n. a dialect Amrywiedig, a. diversified Amrywio, v. diversify Amrywiog, a. various Amrywiogaeth, n. intermixture Amrywiol, a. miscelaneous Amsang, n. a treading about Amsathr, n. a trembling about Amsathru, v. to tread about Amseinio, v. to reverberate Amser, n. season; time: a. timely Amserol, a. timely, seasonable Amseroldeb, n. seasonableness Amseru, v. to time, to fix a time Amwasgu, v. to compress Amwe, n. a selvage Amwedd, n. style; conformity Amweddu, v. to make conformable Amwel, circumspect, wary Amweled, v. to be circumspect Amwes, n. enjoyment Amwisg, n. a covering Amwisgo, v. to shroud, to inwrap Amwiw, a. exellent every way Amwniad, n. a stiching all reund Amwnio, v. to stitch round Amwresygu, v. to begirt Amwys, a. equivocal: witty Amwysiad, n. a punning Amwyth, n. wrath; ferocity Amyd, n. mixt corn Amygiad, n. giving refuge Amyn, conj.
— from A Pocket Dictionary: Welsh-English by William Richards
We must, however, bear in mind, that these general notions are not formed by all men in the same way, but vary in each individual according as the point varies, whereby the body has been most often affected and which the mind most easily imagines or remembers.
— from Ethics by Benedictus de Spinoza
The air is filled with the bleating of calves and sheep, and the hustling of oxen, as if a pastoral valley were going by.
— from Walden, and On The Duty Of Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
The consuls, with Pompey The Great--he, the terror of Pontus, of savage Hydaspes Explorer, the reef that wrecked pirates, caused Jove to turn livid, When thrice was a triumph decreed him, whom Pontus’ vexed water And pacified billows of Bosphorus worshipped!
— from The Satyricon — Complete by Petronius Arbiter
Wherein lighting upon a very easy and scarce observable slip I had made, in putting one seemingly indifferent word for another that discovery opened to me this present view, which here, in this second edition, I submit to the learned world, and which, in short, is this: LIBERTY is a power to act or not to act, according as the mind directs.
— from An Essay Concerning Humane Understanding, Volume 1 MDCXC, Based on the 2nd Edition, Books 1 and 2 by John Locke
Note 585 ( return ) [ Of the strange names given to the different modes of applauding in the theatre, the first was derived from the humming of bees; the second from the rattling of rain or hail on the roofs; and the third from the tinkling of porcelain vessels when clashed together.]
— from The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Complete by Suetonius
This presumption was cherished by a perfidious vizier, who assured his master, that, even if the Barbarians had entered the city, the women and children, from the terraces, would be sufficient to overwhelm them with stones.
— from The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Table of Contents with links in the HTML file to the two Project Gutenberg editions (12 volumes) by Edward Gibbon
Mrs. Shaldin and her trunk had arrived hardly half an hour before, yet the captain’s wife was already there paying visit; which was a sign of the warm friendship that existed between the two women.
— from Project Gutenberg Compilation of 233 Short Stories of Chekhov by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
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— from Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics by Immanuel Kant
each part will necessarily be infinite, and (by Prop. vi.) self—caused, and (by Prop. v.) will perforce consist of a different attribute, so that, in that case, several substances could be formed out of one substance, which (by Prop. vi.) is absurd.
— from Ethics by Benedictus de Spinoza
The artistic merit was purely architectural, and this made itself felt perhaps most distinctly in the prison vaults, which Longfellow pronounced "the most delightful dungeon" he had ever seen.
— from A Little Swiss Sojourn by William Dean Howells
A. --The cause is, that when the screw is so proportioned in its length as to be most suitable for propelling vessels in calms, it is too short to be suitable for propelling vessels which encounter a very heavy resistance.
— from A Catechism of the Steam Engine by Bourne, John, C.E.
To this familiar spot, with its many happy associations, Jesus led the disciples, who would simply expect to pass the night there, as many Passover visitors were accustomed to bivouac in the open air.
— from Expositions of Holy Scripture: St. Mark by Alexander Maclaren
Perhaps the most obvious cases are among the sanguine and imaginative; and the guess would be, that a beautiful person would presently be enriched with all possible virtues, while the colder speculatist would only see in it, not what it possessed, but the mind that it wanted.
— from Lectures on Art by Washington Allston
[25] One of the meanest and pettiest charges concocted for Mr. Peary at a time when personal veracity was regarded as the test of rival claims was that I had attempted to steal the scientific work of a missionary while I was on the Belgica Antarctic Expedition.
— from My Attainment of the Pole Being the Record of the Expedition That First Reached the Boreal Center, 1907-1909. With the Final Summary of the Polar Controversy by Frederick Albert Cook
To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate Section 5.
— from Recollections of a Confederate Staff Officer by G. Moxley (Gilbert Moxley) Sorrel
He aimed a respectful bow at Prince Victor, who snubbed him with a sign of fury.
— from Red Masquerade Being the Story of the Lone Wolf's Daughter by Louis Joseph Vance
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