From some such p. 163feeling came the Pre-Raphaelite movement of our own day and the archaistic movement of later Greek sculpture. |
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No stranger at this house on p. 218the ridgeway, I know every nook of the room. |
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When Mr. Leacock's literal translation of Homer, on p. 193, met my eye, a howl of mirth broke from me. |
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But on linguistic p. 6grounds, this extreme antiquity cannot be maintained. |
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It is possible that some of his labours in this direction p. 48remain unidentified. |
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Poetry, p. 25, which is of similar structure, we find the doubling of the frons. |
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With p. 109him was another subaltern, one of the Hundred and ninety-eighth. |
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There is no image of this p. 211deity which is represented by a yantra, or cabalistical figure. |
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In style, in education, in experience, whatever hake was Borrow was p. 216not. |
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The result is a bridge that for massive solidity may be p. 319pronounced unrivalled. |
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On the untimeous harangue into which Bruce is made to pass on p. 239 I have spoken in its place. |
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He had been a Jesuit, p. 145but was unfrocked and expelled from Society for all sorts of namable and unnamable offences. |
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And so we are brought back to the point from which p. xixwe started. |
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Borlase, in his Antiquities of Cornwall, p. 168, tells us of another strange practice in the hiving of Bees. |
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We p. 71played hopscotch, which is good training for the calves of the legs. |
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At p. 117, vide supra, I have quoted a passage in which he explicitly maintains it. |
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Farnell does not mention this suggestion in his Greece and Babylon, p. 269 ff. |
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To begin with, they are marked by such a deliberate and immitigable baseness of p. 204morality as makes them impossible to man. |
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He wrote to the editor in his childish round hand, stigmatizing the blunder p. 56with youthful scorn. |
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We remembered p. 20that we were among Wahhabi fanatics, and we began to be very much alarmed. |
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Bowker, p. 73, relates a story embodying a similar episode, but apparently connected with Wild Hunt legends. |
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There was something sympathetic in him which p. 383drew every one irresistibly into liking. |
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All Rome, in consequence, seemed to be wending p. 182towards the Porta Pia. |
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I have mentioned in the note to p. 40 Bodenbender's work on the province of La Rioja. |
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General Whipple is my brother-in-law, and he will be p. 281here in a few days and live with us. |
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It stood on the road to wrexham, and has been removed p. 33only a few years. |
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The next morning I reached Baffa, a p. 78village not far distant from the site of the temple. |
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See also lists of words in Brinton, p. 364, from the Patagonian and Fuegian languages. |
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And we will arrange that Rhys and your sister shall also be p. 218united on the occasion. |
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Cramer, 'Bildungsabweich,' p. 99, reference to several leguminous plants with polycarpellary pistils. |
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If you had said you were a Welshman, I should not p. 289have been surprised. |
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Closely related to the last three versions is the passage in the thirteenth-century pOEM printed in OEM p. 173, ll. |
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The nodal brothers' Relacion, which they seem to have been following, mentions, p. 37 vo. |
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Thither go merchants all years for p. 140to seek spices and all manner of merchandises, more commonly than in any other part. |
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She did so and found p. 67herself sitting on a tuft of rushes, and not in a palace. |
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The significance of these various facts is plain to the p. 407advertising tipster, and he shapes his baits accordingly. |
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As has been stated, they constitute the bulk of the light-fingered p. 530fraternity. |
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I was suffering at this time from liver complaint, p. 182and had on my shelf a concoction of taraxacum and podophyllin. |
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The lectionary mentioned on p. 120 was written and signed by a monastic scribe called Sifer Was. |
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The affirmance of these powers by the Supreme Court in 1912 is described at p. 586, infra. |
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These are facts such as the united croaker tribe can p. 210neither refute nor deny. |
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I think p. 13I should, in the event of his cuffing me, knock the Armenian down. |
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Twice she had assisted in cupping, and she believed she could perform the p. 400operation. |
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But do not you wait for it, if you want to be about the lugger p. 154at once. |
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The howling of the winds in the cwms and dingles which run down the p. 13mountain on every side was really appalling. |
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It was the work which the Father had p. 194given him, and which he had covenanted to do. |
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Fair was the form of Cypris, while Adonis was living, but p. 173her beauty has died with Adonis! |
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The liability to costiveness, and the remedies therefor, are noted on p. 55 of this book. |
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Her husband, she said, was not in the p. 130house at present, but she would send for him to the colliery. |
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In that same region be the mountains of Caspian that p. 175men clepe Uber in the country. |
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The details of this doyen club will be found in its proper place, p. 99 et seq. |
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He was in some sort the p. 59grandsire of the Buridan and the Antony of Dumas. |
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The Palace of Adrian, at Tivoli, might have been p. 28hidden in one of its courts. |
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We were prevented during p. 41the whole day from making him take his early bath. |
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There was Purcell, who p. 245could never conquer till all seemed over with him. |
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Greece, out of all her tomes, has left us but a few ill-written p. 77papyri. |
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Note the hogarthian touch of the p. 118initials carved on the window, sufficiently distinct and yet not intrusively so. |
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So he spake in malison, and darkness p. 124veiled her eyes, and there the sacred strength of the sun did waste her quite away. |
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On p. 336 of this book there is a diagram of a very fine shield bearing a diapered chequer. |
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While there p. 250he visited the Chinese Wall, and brought back two specimens from it in the way of bricks. |
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In p. 87autumn they feed on haws and yew-berries, and in the spring on ivy-berries. |
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But the p. 340circumstance was not unnoticed by my lynx-eyed, ghostly comforter. |
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Milton, a chaster and more unerring p. 128master of the art than Shakespeare, reveals no such lovable personality. |
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And Abraham had another son Ishmael that he gat upon Hagar p. 69his chamberer. |
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In the American Journal of horticulture, for 1869, p. 92, is a figure and description. |
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They insisted upon p. 139distinguishing between the tenets of Jansen and Calvinism. |
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Queen of the Iceni, who occupied p. 3Norfolk and the valley of the great Ouse. |
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I got there from Caltanissetta just before the train from Palermo arrived, and the buffo was p. 94looking out of the window. |
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The map he made p. 293Ball considers inferior to that of chenier, published a hundred years before his time. |
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As to finding p. 246them out to make them regorge that was out of the question. |
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You may look to other p. 84refuges but they are not secure, to other coverts but they are not safe. |
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Cruikshank was always p. 401inexhaustible in jokes, anecdotes, and reminiscences. |
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This is proved by The burghal Hidage of which we spoke above, p. 187, and shall speak again hereafter. |
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An attempt was made to induce us to remain at a p. 304respectful distance from his mightiness. |
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Hence the Welsh llifo, to pour, p. 46, might be apt to intermix in the following. |
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This man, whose surname Gam signifies p. 440crooked, was a petty chieftain of breconshire. |
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Brecknockshire, alone of the South p. 203Wales counties, enjoyed exemption from these disturbances. |
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In Appendix, p. 157, will be found an account of an eighth-century Greek bireme, recently discovered. |
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Next, by the process described at p. 53, we transfer to a biliteral Diagram all the information we can. |
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The proprieties did not matter with this bather, who p. 40soon learnt how to splash us. |
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Unfortunately there are not only p. 219crags to cross, but the Kurdistan river has to be forded. |
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The four figures of the Palladian urn on p. 313 are plagiarised in a similar way. |
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Lepus hudsonius Pallas, Glires, p. 30, type locality not stated. |
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See Jrdens I, p. 117, probably depending on the critique in the Allg. |
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This tale is taken from cymru Fu, p. 176, and is from the pen of Glasynys. |
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Note the ternary movement of this song, and see Versification, p. lxxiii. |
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It is engraved in Mr. Cutts' book, p. 402, and taken from harl. |
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But p. 327ever since then I know it is unlucky to see a magpie. |
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As mentioned on p. 162, the Aard Vark is diphyodont like normal mammals. |
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In another p. 108half-hour we had ras el Ahhmar on our left. |
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Neither p. 234father nor daughter was ecclesiastically inclined. |
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Stephenson was again taken on as a brakesman at the p. 40West Moor Pit. |
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Kroeber, Handbook, p. 278, inferentially concurs with this conclusion. |
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Sutton and Burleigh reported M. p. leucopterus from diamante Pass. |
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He was also bailiff of p. 178the town, and an intimate friend of ireton. |
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There appears to be a very early example of syncretism in p. 49Australia. |
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It all went in giving p. 168employment or disseminating kindness. |
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Dictionary and Grammar of the Kongo Language, 1887, p. xxiii. |
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On waking in the morning we all p. 263experienced languor and lassitude. |
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No Elzevir p. 110is valuable unless it be clean and large in the margins. |
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His p. 156letters in the papers used to rile my people terribly. |
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It is a royal road to glory, or p. 20giant-slaying made easy. |
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The Gunpowder Plot is also connected p. 55with this interesting locality. |
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Thus my kindred biddeth me say, and I hight p. 294Fork-beard of Lea. |
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Rawlinson, vide supra, p. 164, identifying Ares with Nimrod. |
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The intermountain Rate cases are fully discussed at p. 610, infra. |
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But p. 152even in the presence of these masters we seek velazquez. |
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After some chaffering, he bought it, taking it without p. 182a warranty. |
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The day of Pentecost foreshowed the universality of some p. 65language. |
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Nineteen Years in Polynesia, p. 238, and Samoa by the same author. |
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Preface to the fourth volume of my edition of the Rig-Veda, p. li. |
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Not one p. 36single moment of the voyage ever hung heavy on the Rob Roy. |
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I observed p. 141that several used Romany words in casual conversation. |
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Translated in Percy's runic Poetry, p. 27, and often since. |
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The house is gone, but it is endeared to me by a very p. 10strange memory. |
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Epos, p. 65, places the fragment in the Finn episode, between ll. |
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The vow of obedience was observed with the most p. 60rigorous exactness. |
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Bibliothek in Wiesbaden, 1877, p. 78, Expositiones Evangeliorum. |
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We all sat down on the ferny slopes and p. 169waited and listened. |
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For the following, compare Kayserling, Sephardim, p. 250 ff. |
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The copy in Buchan's gleanings, p. 90, seems to be taken from Scott. |
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After waiting a little time, he fell to arousing p. 15the archimandrite. |
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See above, p. 142, for the house where Petrarch was born in Arezzo. |
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On p. 291, the asterism is represented simply three asterisks. |
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Arms, p. 400, where the information is derived from Douglas's baronage. |
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See the note p. 11, in the first edition of the bibliomania. |
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I p. 140pay him a commission for brokerage, and my business is done. |
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See Note 16, p. 511, for discussion of yellow and caldarium copper. |
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Cepheus is there too, but he p. 41is smaller, and less easy to find. |
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This is affected by heat and wet, but not p. 194so much, as cordage is. |
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See p. 172, note 2, for sketch of life and death of cornstalk. |
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See our volume xxii, p. 275, note 231, for the fort at Council Bluffs. |
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On the whole, the p. 125performance wanted more glow and animal spirits. |
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Roth found that the secretion of P. novae seelandiae when ejected is grayish or milky in color. |
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The label now bears in handwriting the name of P. amplus pergracilis and is followed by Benson's initials as the identifier. |
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Another species, Formica sanguinea, was likewise first discovered by P. Huber to be a slave-making ant. |
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I find that the mid-styled P. sinensis is more fertile with own pollen, even, than a heteromorphic union! |
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The inscription in Caria, formerly supposed to give P. as praenomen, is now shown to have been misread. |
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We extend to Mr. P. our sincere sympathy in the greatest calamity that can befall an unmarriageable man. |
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Mr. P. is sullen, and seems to mistake an eructation for the breaking of wind backwards. |
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Specimens from a transect of southeastern Sonora show intergradation between Perognathus goldmani and P. artus. |
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On the reverse is a counterseal, with the arms of the then seigneur, P. Le Pelley. |
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The same result was attained in the same manner with P. alata, but only with one plant out of three. |
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The taxonomic validity of Pseudoficimia pulcherrima remains doubtful, for only minor characters distinguish it from P. frontalis. |
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Another species of the same genus, the pinyon mouse, P. truei, also lives on the Mesa Verde. |
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The subspecies of P. deppei have been defined on characters of coloration and scutellation. |
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Went to pilling's Works but could not find Mr. P. or learn anything about my uncle. |
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The low country wanderoo is replaced in the hills by the larger species, P. ursinus, which inhabits the mountain zone. |
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Fryer also noted that the mimetic forms of P. polytes were taken as well as the non-mimetic. |
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The P. corporis, the body louse, is of a dirty white colour, and varies from half to two lines in length. |
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Some behavioral differences, however, are pointed out in the account of P. pectoralis. |
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Professor P. Cohn has recently described the mode in which he has manufactured the Japanese sake or rice wine in the laboratory. |
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In psoriasis it is a fairly good remedy, but inferior to crysarobin in P. inveterata. |
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The cone resembles that of P. excelsa, but is prevalently much shorter and with a relatively shorter peduncle. |
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Actually for P. polytes the decrease would not be so marked because the male is non-mimetic. |
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Moreover the conelet is usually, perhaps always, subterminal in P. occidentalis. |
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Rostafinski strangely confused the synonymy here, including even P. rufipes Alb. |
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The thoracic artery in P. subis arose either from the subclavian artery, or from the coracoid artery. |
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The conidia of P. densa are similar, but the germination is different. |
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During the Cimbric, P. Malleolus was guilty of the first matricide. |
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For orography and geology see an article by P. Verri in Boll. |
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N is pipe from pump E leading to reservoir P. Q is igniter tube. |
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From P. albicaulis, with similar leaves, it differs by its dehiscent cone. |
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Differs from P. corticatus in gills not anastomosing behind. |
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For the taxonomic status of P. boylii in Tamaulipas see Alvarez. |
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Differs from P. mitis in being shining white and subsessile. |
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The dentate ray-tracheids of P. longifolia are not always obvious. |
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In P. Wilsoni we have a wonderful example of morphological emphasis. |
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The P. capitis, the head louse, is much smaller than the above. |
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Then the crab apple is Pyrus malus, the wild pear P. communis, and so on. |
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Slippery's seen a M. P. nosin' around in front of the gin mill. |
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Later, Hill reduced cognatus to subspecific status under P. rayneri. |
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