The North American Review, Volume 107University of Northern Iowa, 1868 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 124
... learned to be written and spoken , not to be dozed over , dabbled in , and for- gotten . They were learned in the natural way , by concrete examples , and by assiduous practice , not out of grammars bristling with inexplicable ...
... learned to be written and spoken , not to be dozed over , dabbled in , and for- gotten . They were learned in the natural way , by concrete examples , and by assiduous practice , not out of grammars bristling with inexplicable ...
Page 126
... learned in one third of the time now spent in learning them superfi- cially . We should again have excellent Hellenists and Latin- ists , not , perhaps , scholars like Erasmus and Scaliger , for we no longer need them , and Donaldson's ...
... learned in one third of the time now spent in learning them superfi- cially . We should again have excellent Hellenists and Latin- ists , not , perhaps , scholars like Erasmus and Scaliger , for we no longer need them , and Donaldson's ...
Page 343
... learned his lesson , but he understands it , " thus forming a climax ; " I have formed him ; yea , I have made him . " 4. Where the emphasis lies , not upon the assertions themselves , but upon their union ; as , " He is both learned ...
... learned his lesson , but he understands it , " thus forming a climax ; " I have formed him ; yea , I have made him . " 4. Where the emphasis lies , not upon the assertions themselves , but upon their union ; as , " He is both learned ...
Contents
LAURENCE Sterne | 1 |
METEORIC SHOWERS | 38 |
THE RELIGIOUS REFORM MOVEMENT IN ITALY | 51 |
14 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American Aristophanes Aurengzebe better birds blank verse called cause century character charm Church Convention CVII Dryden England English evolution existence expression fact faith force French Frere genius GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS give Greek honor hundred hypothesis interest language learned less literary living matter means mechanist theory ment meteoroids Michabo Michigan mind miocene moral nature never organic origin of species original passage perhaps phenomena philosophical poem poet poetry political Popham Colony Potiphar present principles prose reader reform regard rhyme River Saginaw Saginaw River says scholars seems sense Sir Charles Lyell soul speak special creation species Spencer spirit Sterne style subjunctive Swetchine theory things thought tion translation Tristram Shandy verse vitalist volume vowel whole words writing