The Works of Samuel Johnson, Volumen 10F.C. and J. Rivington, 1823 |
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... produce neither fruits nor flowers ; and that , after a long and laborious cultivation , not even the barren laurel had been found upon it . Yet on this province , my Lord , I entered , with the pleasing hope , that , as it was low , it ...
... produce neither fruits nor flowers ; and that , after a long and laborious cultivation , not even the barren laurel had been found upon it . Yet on this province , my Lord , I entered , with the pleasing hope , that , as it was low , it ...
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... produced either by an admission into common speech , in some me- taphorical signification , which is the acquisition of a kind of property among us ; as we say , the zenith of advancement , the meridian of life , the cynosure * of ...
... produced either by an admission into common speech , in some me- taphorical signification , which is the acquisition of a kind of property among us ; as we say , the zenith of advancement , the meridian of life , the cynosure * of ...
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... produced by necessity , and enlarged by accident , and is therefore com- posed of dissimilar parts , thrown together by negli- gence , by affectation , by learning , or by ignorance . Our inflections therefore are by no means con- stant ...
... produced by necessity , and enlarged by accident , and is therefore com- posed of dissimilar parts , thrown together by negli- gence , by affectation , by learning , or by ignorance . Our inflections therefore are by no means con- stant ...
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... produced the peculiar sense , in which a word is found in any great author : faculties , in Shakspeare , signifies the powers of authority : This Duncan Has borne his faculties so meek , has been So clear in his great office , that ...
... produced the peculiar sense , in which a word is found in any great author : faculties , in Shakspeare , signifies the powers of authority : This Duncan Has borne his faculties so meek , has been So clear in his great office , that ...
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Samuel Johnson. from others which the ignorance or negligence of later writers has produced . Every language has its anomalies , which though inconvenient , and in themselves once unnecessary , must be tolerated among the imperfections ...
Samuel Johnson. from others which the ignorance or negligence of later writers has produced . Every language has its anomalies , which though inconvenient , and in themselves once unnecessary , must be tolerated among the imperfections ...
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