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usa ninyu magdala sa
Usag usa ninyu magdala sa íyang galamitun, Each and every one of you must bring his own tools.
— from A Dictionary of Cebuano Visayan by John U. Wolff

Unsa nang mitugsuy sa
Unsa nang mitugsuy sa ímung bursa, ságing?
— from A Dictionary of Cebuano Visayan by John U. Wolff

until next morning soundly
The water-clock was punctual in its duty, and I slept until next morning soundly, with the exception of the periodical interruption.
— from The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven Edition Table Of Contents And Index Of The Five Volumes by Edgar Allan Poe

universal nature maybe subjective
How far this restoration of universal nature maybe subjective, as involved in the changed perceptions of man thus brought into harmony with God, and how far it may have an objective and independent existence, it were vain to speculate.
— from St. Paul's Epistles to the Colossians and Philemon A revised text with introductions, notes and dissertations by J. B. (Joseph Barber) Lightfoot

ug náay masúgù She
Taslakan kaáyu siya ug náay masúgù, She is very lazy when there’s s.o. to do the household work.
— from A Dictionary of Cebuano Visayan by John U. Wolff

Ummat Nabi Muhammad sidang
636 ] Ummat Nabi Muhammad sidang manusia Si Anu!
— from Malay Magic Being an introduction to the folklore and popular religion of the Malay Peninsula by Walter William Skeat

use Natural melancholy signs
Men seduced by spirits in the night Metempsychosis Metals, minerals for melancholy Meteors strange, how caused Metoposcopy foreshowing melancholy Milk a melancholy meat Mind how it works on the body Minerals good against melancholy Ministers how they cause despair Mirach, mesentery, matrix, mesaraic veins, causes of melancholy Mirabolanes purgers of melancholy Mirth and mercy company excellent against melancholy; their abuses Miseries of man; how they cause melancholy; common miseries; miseries of both sorts; no man free, miseries' effects in us; sent for our good; miseries of students and scholars Mitigations of melancholy Money's prerogatives; allurement Moon inhabited; moon in love Mother how cause of melancholy Moving faculty described Music a present remedy for melancholy; its effects; a symptom of lovers; causes of love-melancholy N. Nakedness of parts a cause of love-melancholy; cure of love-melancholy Narrow streets where in use Natural melancholy signs Natural signs of love-melancholy Necessity to what it enforceth Neglect and contempt, best cures of jealousy Nemesis or punishment comes after Nerves what News most welcome Nobility censured Non-necessary causes of melancholy Nuns' melancholy Nurse, how cause of melancholy O. Objects causing melancholy to be removed Obstacles and hindrances of lovers Occasions to be avoided in love-melancholy Odoraments to smell to for melancholy Ointments, for melancholy Ointments riotously used Old folks apt to be jealous Old folks' incontinency taxed Old age a cause of melancholy; old men's sons often melancholy One love drives out another Opinions of or concerning the soul Oppression's effects Opportunity and importunity causes of love-melancholy Organical parts Overmuch joy, pride, praise, how causes of melancholy P. Palaces Paleness and leanness, symptoms of love-melancholy Papists' religious symptoms Paracelsus' defence of minerals Parents, how they wrong their children; how they cause melancholy by propagation; how by remissness and indulgence Paraenetical discourse to such as are troubled in mind Particular parts distempered,
— from The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton

up next morning she
When the old witch got up next morning, she called her daughter, and wanted to give her the apron, but she did not come.
— from Grimms' Fairy Tales by Wilhelm Grimm

up no more sugar
The fruit is then put into boilers with crystallized sugar dissolved in a small quantity of water, and cooked; then allowed to cool, and boiled again until it will take up no more sugar.
— from One Thousand Questions in California Agriculture Answered by Edward J. (Edward James) Wickson

up no more space
Recently, a Parisian optician has succeeded in constructing an instrument of this kind that is somewhat of a novelty in its way, since its mechanism allows it to be closed in such a manner as to take up no more space than a package of cigarettes (Fig.
— from Scientific American Supplement, No. 365, December 30, 1882 by Various

usually no more said
The poet's biographers and critics have commonly shirked the responsibility of discussing this poem, and when the Primrose stanza has been quoted, and the Parlour stanza smiled at, there is usually no more said about Peter Bell .
— from Gossip in a Library by Edmund Gosse

us Negroes my son
They call us Negroes, my son, and everybody knows what that means!"
— from The Hindered Hand; or, The Reign of the Repressionist by Sutton E. (Sutton Elbert) Griggs

urgent necessity may stipulate
In capitulations for the surrender of strong places or fortified camps, the commanding officer, in cases of urgent necessity, may stipulate that the troops under his command shall not fight again in the war until exchanged; [but no more.] § 78.
— from A Code for the Government of Armies in the Field, as authorized by the laws and usages of war on land. by United States. War Department

us need most strongly
The best of us need most strongly to guard ourselves against censoriousness.
— from The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Isaiah, Volume 2 (of 2) by George Adam Smith

unicorn not merely symbolical
[Pg 130] Mediæval Conception of the Unicorn The mediæval conception of the unicorn as the water-conner of the beasts was doubtless suggested by that belief of earlier ages which made the unicorn not merely symbolical of virtue and purity, but the more immediate emblem of Christ as the horn of our salvation (Psalms xcii.
— from Fictitious & Symbolic Creatures in Art With Special Reference to Their Use in British Heraldry by John Vinycomb

Ullathorne no man s
No meet had been more popular than Ullathorne; no man's stables had been more liberally open to the horses of distant men than Mr. Thorne's; no man had said more, written more, or done more to keep the club up.
— from Barchester Towers by Anthony Trollope

us no more said
He will trouble us no more!" said Rains.
— from The Border Spy; or, The Beautiful Captive of the Rebel Camp A Story of the War by Harry Hazelton


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