Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
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Page 45
... become even more conventionally respectable . The municipal authorities have done much for the welfare of the citi- zens , as the stranger is almost sorry to observe . They have re- built and purified a network of narrow medieval ...
... become even more conventionally respectable . The municipal authorities have done much for the welfare of the citi- zens , as the stranger is almost sorry to observe . They have re- built and purified a network of narrow medieval ...
Page 47
... become so many hells of boisterous turmoil when the sea boils through them in storms . Lundy , from time immemorial , has always been the resort of the lawless ; and , strange to say , even down. 1887. ] 47 A Sketch from Ilfracombe .
... become so many hells of boisterous turmoil when the sea boils through them in storms . Lundy , from time immemorial , has always been the resort of the lawless ; and , strange to say , even down. 1887. ] 47 A Sketch from Ilfracombe .
Page 72
... becomes the object to some verb understood ! It is unnecessary to cite further examples ; these instances show how very unnatural and compli- cated a science grammar tends to become when constructed to suit the idiosyncrasies of a ...
... becomes the object to some verb understood ! It is unnecessary to cite further examples ; these instances show how very unnatural and compli- cated a science grammar tends to become when constructed to suit the idiosyncrasies of a ...
Page 73
... become a master of language without knowing more languages than one . The Greeks suffered from knowing only one language : this led them frequently to mistake differences and similari- ties of names for differences and similarities of ...
... become a master of language without knowing more languages than one . The Greeks suffered from knowing only one language : this led them frequently to mistake differences and similari- ties of names for differences and similarities of ...
Page 75
... become the foundation of the pupil's thought and know- ledge in all the great human sub- jects of instruction . I ... becomes a mere rote exer- cise of memory . They try to make the class reproduce the story ex- actly , in the very same ...
... become the foundation of the pupil's thought and know- ledge in all the great human sub- jects of instruction . I ... becomes a mere rote exer- cise of memory . They try to make the class reproduce the story ex- actly , in the very same ...
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