The English CyclopaediaBradbury, Evans, 1867 |
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Page 57
... pupils dilated , but in the worst cases contracted ; the position of the body is supine ; in the worst cases there is a constant tendency to sink down in the bed ; the limbs are motionless ; and the evacuations , if not wholly retained ...
... pupils dilated , but in the worst cases contracted ; the position of the body is supine ; in the worst cases there is a constant tendency to sink down in the bed ; the limbs are motionless ; and the evacuations , if not wholly retained ...
Page 119
... pupils of the Royal Academy of Music , at the Hanover Square concert rooms , to which the public are admitted . Exeter Hall , Strand , is much used for performances of various kinds of music , chiefly sacred . The Sacred Harmonic ...
... pupils of the Royal Academy of Music , at the Hanover Square concert rooms , to which the public are admitted . Exeter Hall , Strand , is much used for performances of various kinds of music , chiefly sacred . The Sacred Harmonic ...
Page 383
... pupils in all the institutions to the use of both the manual alphabets . A dactylology of syllables has been sometimes employed in the instruction of the deaf and dumb . This was one of the means adopted by Pereire , who lived in the ...
... pupils in all the institutions to the use of both the manual alphabets . A dactylology of syllables has been sometimes employed in the instruction of the deaf and dumb . This was one of the means adopted by Pereire , who lived in the ...
Page 399
... pupils who have been admitted into the Yorkshire Institution have been from the district of the West , traversed by the great Penine chain . This chain commences in the Staffordshire moorlands , goes through Derbyshire ( the Peak ) ...
... pupils who have been admitted into the Yorkshire Institution have been from the district of the West , traversed by the great Penine chain . This chain commences in the Staffordshire moorlands , goes through Derbyshire ( the Peak ) ...
Page 403
... pupils received into that insti- tution are of that class who hear the least ; about the same proportion would be found in the English institutions . The other half comprise cases more or less of imperfect deafness , an expression which ...
... pupils received into that insti- tution are of that class who hear the least ; about the same proportion would be found in the English institutions . The other half comprise cases more or less of imperfect deafness , an expression which ...
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The English Cyclopaedia: A New Dictionary Of Universal Knowledge;, 1. köide Charles Knight No preview available - 2019 |
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Popular passages
Page 19 - In taking two stations having the same value, the one to the north and the other to the south of...
Page 205 - An Act for the Encouragement of Learning, by vesting the Copies of printed Books in the Authors or Purchasers of such Copies during the Times therein mentioned...
Page 91 - ... in respect of the premises so jointly occupied, in case the clear yearly value of such premises shall be of an amount which, when divided by the number of such occupiers, shall give a sum of not less than ten pounds for each and every such occupier, but not otherwise.
Page 85 - Statutum de tallagio non concedendo, that no tallage or aid shall be laid or levied by the King or his heirs in this realm, without the good will and assent of the Archbishops, Bishops, Earls, Barons, Knights, Burgesses, and other the freemen of the commonalty of this realm...
Page 9 - ... if any person shall import into the United Kingdom, from beyond the seas, any false or counterfeit coin resembling, or apparently intended to resemble or pass for, any of the king's current gold or silver coin, knowing the same to be false or counterfeit...
Page 247 - That all Actions and Proceedings which before the passing of this Act might have been brought in any of Her Majesty's Superior Courts of Record where the Plaintiff dwells more than Twenty Miles from the Defendant, or where the Cause of Action did not arise wholly or in some material Point within the Jurisdiction of the Court within which the Defendant dwells or carries on his Business at the Time of the Action brought...
Page 153 - ... may have within his constablewick by virtue of the common law of this realm, or of any statutes made or to be made, and shall obey all such lawful...
Page 201 - That when any real estate of the nature of customary freehold or tenant right, or customary or copyhold, shall be disposed of by will, the lord of the manor or reputed manor of which such real estate is holden, or his steward, or the deputy of such steward, shall cause the will by which such disposition shall be made, or so much thereof as shall contain the disposition of such real estate, to be entered on the court rolls of such manor or reputed manor; and when any trusts are declared...
Page 93 - Resolved, that it is a high infringement of the liberties and privileges of the Commons of the United Kingdom for any lord of parliament or other peer or prelate, not being a peer of Ireland at the time elected and...
Page 75 - Templars: they were societies of those knights placed upon some of their estates in the country under the government of a commander, who were allowed proper maintenance out of the revenues under their care, and accounted for the remainder to the grand prior at London.