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Both, with him, are substances, independent powers, reciprocally excluding oppositions.
— from A History of Philosophy in Epitome by Albert Schwegler
Several important points regarding early Christian and Talmudic topography are cleared up by these works.
— from Palestine by C. R. (Claude Reignier) Conder
Or, if 2 c.c. of hexamolar hydrochloric acid is added to 50 c.c. of the cadmium sulphate solution and the mixture is saturated with hydrogen sulphide, 415 cadmium sulphide is precipitated readily ( exp. )
— from The Elements of Qualitative Chemical Analysis, vol. 1, parts 1 and 2. With Special Consideration of the Application of the Laws of Equilibrium and of the Modern Theories of Solution. by Julius Stieglitz
In view of these explicit statements it is difficult to see what the Church Father Lactantius meant by asserting ( de Vero Cultu , 23): Non enim, sicut iuris publici ratio est, sola mulier adultera est, quae habet alium; maritus autem, etiamsi plures habeat, a crimine adulterii solutus est.
— from A Short History of Women's Rights From the Days of Augustus to the Present Time. with Special Reference to England and the United States. Second Edition Revised, With Additions. by Eugene A. (Eugene Arthur) Hecker
Similar unfronting of the vowel is seen in prenciple , reddance , enterdick .
— from Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch A contribution to the study of the linguistic relations of English and Scandinavian by George T. (George Tobias) Flom
During the six-day session it passed resolutions expressing sympathy with Boston and discussed means of aiding that city.
— from Voices; Birth-Marks; The Man and the Elephant by Mathew Joseph Holt
The Panama scandals in Paris revealed enough to the world to allow everyone to judge for himself.
— from The Strand Magazine, Vol. 07, Issue 42, June, 1894 An Illustrated Monthly by Various
53, n. 2. “Omne quod recipit aliquid ab alio, est in potentia respectu illius: et hoc quod receptum est in eo, est actus ejus; ergo oportet, quod ipsa forma vel quidditas, quæ est intelligentia [ i.e. a pure spirit], sit in potentia respectu esse, quod a Deo recipit, et illud esse receptum est per modum actus, et ita invenitur actus et potentia in intelligentiis [ i.e. pure spirits], non tamen forma et materia nisi aequivoce.” — De Ente et Essentia , cap.
— from Ontology, or the Theory of Being by P. (Peter) Coffey
Inferior articles, false descriptions, substitutions for the one selected, and various other peculations, take place there as frequently as is the case when wines are purchased at the dealer’s shop, &c. Other impositions of as flagrant a nature consist in transferring wines of a most 37 inferior sort into pipes recently emptied, and originally filled with wine of the best vintages and flavour; and as the outside of the cask bears the marks of the foreign houses of character, from whose vintages the wines contained in the casks were furnished, this fraud is found to turn to very good account.
— from Deadly Adulteration and Slow Poisoning Unmasked Disease and Death in the Pot and Bottle by Anonymous
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