The North American Review, Volume 68Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1849 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 7
... rule of its own law , but they are the exercise of a limited right , conceded by nations to each other , which right is defined by the law of nations , and does not spring from the municipal law of any country . A neutral merchant- ship ...
... rule of its own law , but they are the exercise of a limited right , conceded by nations to each other , which right is defined by the law of nations , and does not spring from the municipal law of any country . A neutral merchant- ship ...
Page 454
... rule on the mind of the youth- ful aspirant for knowledge , inasmuch as , of the six examples given under this rule , of words in which the vowel of the accented syllable is to be pronounced long , four , namely , pă- ter , dedit , tuba ...
... rule on the mind of the youth- ful aspirant for knowledge , inasmuch as , of the six examples given under this rule , of words in which the vowel of the accented syllable is to be pronounced long , four , namely , pă- ter , dedit , tuba ...
Page 457
... rules of quantity would , if the language were correctly pronounced , be deduced from it by the pupil him- self . For example , the rule which declares a diphthong to be long . If the learner had been accustomed to sound the two vowels ...
... rules of quantity would , if the language were correctly pronounced , be deduced from it by the pupil him- self . For example , the rule which declares a diphthong to be long . If the learner had been accustomed to sound the two vowels ...
Contents
HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL POETRY | 1 |
Lives of the Chief Fathers of New England | 82 |
A Sketch of the History of Harvard College | 99 |
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admiration alphabet altar American ancient appear ascer beauty Brazil British called character chloroform claim Cotton Mather diphthong England English ether existence fact fathers feeling feet Fielding Fielding's foreign friends German give Greek Harvard College heart honor human hundred Increase Mather institution interest Joseph Andrews king labor lady language law of nations learning letters Lord Lord Aberdeen Lord Ashburton Lord Campbell LXVIII means ment mind moral mound builders nature never noble novel object passed peace persons poems poet poetry political present principles pronounced Prussia quantity question Quintilian race reader regard remarkable respect right of search right of visit rule says scene seems slaves sound spirit Squier student syllable territory thing thought tion Tom Jones treaty truth verse vessel volume vowel Webster whole words writer