| William Benjamin Carpenter - Fishes - 1844 - 600 pages
...being present, and the vertebral column and ribs possessing many characters, in which they resemble those of that order of Reptiles. In the Eels, again,...tunic ; from which they derive the name of Tunicata. None of them have any considerable power of spontaneous movement ; and a large proportion of them are... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1844 - 608 pages
...glance at their exterior. 42. Lastly, we may advert to an instance, in which even two iuib-kingdomt are connected, by links of transition so close, that...tunic ; from which they derive the name of Tunicata. None of them have any considerable power of spontaneous movement ; and a large proportion of them are... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - Zoology - 1848 - 594 pages
...they resemble those of that order of Reptiles. In the Eels, again, we have the form of the Serpent so exactly repeated, that it is not easy to distinguish...tunic ; from which they derive the name of Tunicata. None of them have any considerable power of spontaneous movement ; and a large proportion of them are... | |
| George Smith, William Makepeace Thackeray - Electronic journals - 1861 - 804 pages
...taverns, or taverns have become so like concert halls and such like places of public entertainment that it is not easy to say where one begins and the other leaves off. A great want must surely have been met when promoters and managers of the People's amusements... | |
| Theodore Parker - Atheism - 1861 - 448 pages
...is disturbed. So much for the definition of terms. There may be various Degrees of Error and of Sin. It is not easy to say where one begins and the other ends ; for in ethics as in all science, it is not easy to distinguish things by their circumferences,... | |
| Theodore Parker - American literature - 1865 - 682 pages
...is disturbed. So much for the definition of terms. There may be various degrees of Error and of Sin. It is not easy to say where one begins and the other ends ; for in ethics, as in all science, it is not easy to distinguish things by their circumferences,... | |
| Theodore Parker - Theology - 1867 - 338 pages
...is disturbed. So much for the definition of terms. There may be various degrees of Error and of Sin. It is not easy to say where one begins and the other ends ; for in ethics, as in all science, it is not easy to distinguish things by their circumferences,... | |
| Sir Frederick Treves - 1895 - 1234 pages
...uncommon in tuberculous disease. The affected district fades off gradually into the healthy tissue, and it is not easy to say where one begins and the other ends. In tuberculosis the inflammatory process is attended by a considerable exudation of a low type... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1907 - 416 pages
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