Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 142William Blackwood, 1887 - England |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 71
Page 76
... whole , to be read off in one breath . He takes home the sen- tences " naked , " as our gramma- rians would say : by jumbling them up into a confused , cumbrous , com- plicated whole , he gives them their necessary " clothing . " But no ...
... whole , to be read off in one breath . He takes home the sen- tences " naked , " as our gramma- rians would say : by jumbling them up into a confused , cumbrous , com- plicated whole , he gives them their necessary " clothing . " But no ...
Page 80
... whole in his mind . He has had explained to him many abstract processes of thought , and has some grasp of abstract ideas . He has gained some appreciation of the niceties and delicacies of language , 80 [ July Secondary Education in ...
... whole in his mind . He has had explained to him many abstract processes of thought , and has some grasp of abstract ideas . He has gained some appreciation of the niceties and delicacies of language , 80 [ July Secondary Education in ...
Page 82
... whole time to the organisation of higher work , and able to count upon the continuous attendance of their scholars for at least four years . The whole work should be con- ducted and tested , not according to officially fixed standards ...
... whole time to the organisation of higher work , and able to count upon the continuous attendance of their scholars for at least four years . The whole work should be con- ducted and tested , not according to officially fixed standards ...
Page 93
... whole force capable of mobil- isation at a moment's notice , and incapable , except in the event of a great defeat , of suffering through lack of necessaries . Accepting this statement as incontrovertible , the Secretary of State gave ...
... whole force capable of mobil- isation at a moment's notice , and incapable , except in the event of a great defeat , of suffering through lack of necessaries . Accepting this statement as incontrovertible , the Secretary of State gave ...
Page 97
... whole will require a lump sum of pro- bably a million and a half . Where is the money to come from ? We answer , without hesitation , from the Sinking Fund , the entire sup- pression of which for a single year will enable us to set in ...
... whole will require a lump sum of pro- bably a million and a half . Where is the money to come from ? We answer , without hesitation , from the Sinking Fund , the entire sup- pression of which for a single year will enable us to set in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able arms army Austria Axel Munthe beautiful believe Bellendean better called Captain Church Colonel course cried CXLII.-NO daugh dear delightful door doubt England English eyes face fact father feeling felt force French friends German girl give Gladstone Government hand Hayward head heart honour Ireland Irish Janet Joyce Joyce's kind King knew lady land LĂ©opoldville Liberal Unionists live look Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Hartington Lord Palmerston means ment military mind Miss natural ness never night officers once Parliament party passed perhaps Poland present question river round Russia scarcely Scotland seemed Serk side sion Sir Charles Dilke Sitwell speak standing stood strange sure Taplow tell thing thought tion took turned Vistula voice War Office wife woman wonder words young