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Nature24.02.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 24. Februar 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] matter of Life, presenting no appreciable morphological characters. It becomes evident, moreover, that if the old term “cell” is still applied to these mere bits of living stuff or protoplasm—not because they are morphological units, but simply because biologists have been compelled [...]
[...] to such indefinite protoplasmic masses—then this term, thus employed, must be seen to have so entirely lost its old signification, that it can be regarded only as a mere courtesy title. Vital power has obviously been transferred from a definite morphological unit—the cell—to mere [...]
[...] from a definite morphological unit—the cell—to mere living matter, and if any people do persist in still calling a portion of such mere matter by the name of the morpho [...]
[...] logical unit, simply because this was of old also assumed to be the vital unit, we must not allow such mere con fusion in language to confuse us as to the real facts and inferences. [...]
[...] group Momera, some of which have no bounding membrane, though they have a nucleus, whilst others, simpler still, are mere bits of protoplasm—naked, non-nucleated, structureless 2 Yet, such minute, homogeneous, and alto gether indefinite bits of protoplasm, are as capable of [...]
[...] rather, as we should have said, before it had been gene rally acknowledged that vital manifestations could be displayed by mere bits of protoplasm lacking the supposed necessary elements of form, Professor Huxley had put forth a powerful remonstrance against the then all-preva [...]
[...] constitute one of these, or to constitute a vital unit of one of the higher living things, all that is needed is mere formless, indefinite Protoplasm — or, as Mr. Stirling contemptuously expresses it, a mere “shred" of the matter of Life. [...]
[...] lege at Cirencester, have also contributed towards the attainment of the same object; but, as a rule, agriculture is practised almost exclusively under the guidance of mere traditional principles and habitual routine, without those engaged in this business having any appreciation of the [...]
[...] many by the aid of the various governments and with the hearty support of farmers. It is indeed strange that in a country like ours, where agriculture is no longer a mere [...]
[...] duce the very worst barking dissonance attainable. Mr. Deas' million-fiddler-power sound, so far from being “pure" or “ethereal,” would not be a musical sound at all, but a mere bewildering chaos of noises, likely to drive the inventor himself, [...]
The connoisseur29.07.1756
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 29. Juli 1756
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] totally unfits a man for all the focial offices of life, as Indolence. An idle man is a mere blank in the creation: he feems made for no end, and lives to no purpofe. He can not engage himſelf in any employment or [...]
[...] TH E R E is not in the world a more ufeleſs idle animal, than he who contents himſelf with being merely a Gentleman. He has an eſtate, therefore he will not endeavour to acquire knowledge: he is not to labour in any voca [...]
[...] VIRTUE then is not to be confidered in the the light of mere innocence, or abſtaining from harm ; but as the exertion of our faculties in doing good: as Titus, when he had let a day [...]
The connoisseur13.02.1755
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. Februar 1755
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] MY country readers, and all thoſe who live at a diſtance from the polite world, may perhaps look upon this fcheme as merely fantaſtical and imaginary ; but nothing is more true. The [...]
[...] higheſt diſtinćtion, bunches of diamonds. This and the Pompon, which it is faid has been lately worn merely as a type of the Fig-leaf, will make up the common dreſs of the whole female world: but if ever the weather ſhould be too [...]
[...] leaft inclined to liften to the malignant infinua tions, that when a married woman endeavours to look particularly tempting, it is not merely to pleaſe her huſband, but to captivate a gallant. It may perhaps be further objećted, that our [...]
The connoisseur04.09.1755
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. September 1755
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] Think, failors, think, though landmen are your hate, JWho likes a mere tarpaulin but his mate ? [...]
[...] remarkable, that all thofe, who are employed in the care of horfes, grow as mere brutes as the animals they attend ; and as we may often obſerve thoſe juſtices, whoſe chief bufineſs is the exami [...]
[...] much better grace they appear in the world than the reft of their brethren, who, when laid up and taken out of fervice, are as mere logs as the main-maft. An officer, who has any reliſh for reading, will employ the many vacant hours, in [...]
Nature27.03.1873
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 27. März 1873
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] abstraction. Proſs. Thomson and Tait, on the contrary, begin with kinematics, the science of mere motion considered apart from the nature of the moving body and the causes which produce its motion. This science differs from geometry [...]
[...] produce its motion. This science differs from geometry only by the explicit introduction of the idea of time as a measurable quantity. (The idea of time as a mere sequence of ideas is as necessary in geometry as in every other department of thought.) Hence kinematics, as [...]
[...] Illent S. Mathematicians may flatter themselves that they possess new ideas which mere human language is as yet unable to express. Let them make the effort to ex press these ideas in appropriate words without the aid of [...]
[...] strong beget families 2 Observe //ants at the ſoof of the l'hite mountains, where are /a/ge trees, and so up to the swim iſ, where they are mere shrubs. The weak may and do survive as well as the strong. Ignorance lies at the base of the discussion.” [...]
[...] clear that their light analysed by the prism would give us no great indication of a continuous spectrum, we should merely get one bright line in the orange. But neglect the dark lines for a moment: dealing merely with the continuous spectrum of the sun and star, it shows that we [...]
[...] sunlight as we know them to be. But we have not yet exhausted the wonders of the celestial field ; we have dealt merely with the sum and moon, the stars and planets. What about the nebulae, those strange weird things, dimly shining in the depths [...]
[...] neglect the Fraunhofer lines, which I shall explain after wards—the light which he got from the nebula consisted merely of three lines. He was exceedingly astonished, so much so that he thought the instrument might be out of order. However, it became perfectly clear to him in [...]
[...] really contained nothing at all, and when, moreover, the temperature is comparatively low. Now, not only is this a fact, which we are quite prepared to assert, merely on the evidence rendered us by these tubes, but I think you will acknowledge that it is entirely in accordance with [...]
[...] Lºs on this interesting subject still continue to pour in upon us in so great abundance that limited space compels us to select merely the facts contained in each. The best service we can at present render to the unravelling of the, we think, yet unsolved problem is [...]
[...] different world of experience from ours, though developed under common laws of acquisition, that we have no means of deciding what is impossible to be done by some dogs through mere expe rience. One of your correspondents, Mr. Brewer, had good remarks [...]
Saturday review25.08.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. August 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] so far as his temporal power went, a mere vassal of [...]
[...] thoroughly with the democratic element in the south of Europe. There is a difficulty about this. Democracy in these times is no longer merely a form of government. If it merely meant this, the Church of Rome might be democratic in politics to-morrow. Modern democracy, however, can hardly [...]
[...] nents. The rudeness, the injustice, the undiscriminating contempt of that memorable diatribe made everybody who read it a Tory dympathiser by mere reaction. And is it surprising that the Tories [...]
[...] amount for which it is nominally given. In present times the practice has become . inveterate, and even judges who did not fail to see its absurdity have conformed to it merely because [...]
[...] of Doctrine suggests a comparison with such a book, for instance, as Reuss's Théologie Chrétienne. . We expect in it not merely the chronological sequence of facts, but something of an attempt to show the relations of these facts to one another, to group and [...]
[...] of course forgery, of Henry Stephens; the other, to which he is more inclined, that some of the Greeks who came over to Italy when threatened by the Turks may have written it as a mere exercise of literary skill. Neither guess is very felicitous. [...]
[...] in which nicer shades of meaning are missed or left untranslated, we can but think through simple neglect on the translator's part to penetrate below the mere surface of the Greek. In Medea, 724, where Creon tells Medea in her distress, | [...]
[...] However, it is not mere logic that we complain of A writer [...]
[...] MERE'S MEMOIRS and CORRESPONDENCE, from his Family Papers. By the IRight Hon. MARY Viscountess CoMBERMERE, and Captain W. W. KNoLLYs. 2 vols. 8vo. with Portraits, bound, 30s. [...]
[...] more than a mere narrative of travel, as they contain a variety of [...]
The connoisseur06.02.1755
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 06. Februar 1755
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 3
[...] deviſed. I have known a whole company ſtart from their chairs, and begin tilting at each other merely for their diverſion. Another time thefe exalted geniufes have caft lots, which ſhould be thrown out of the window ; and at [...]
[...] ran naked into the ftreets. I remember a little gentleman not above five feet high, who was refolved, merely for the fake of the Frolick, to lie with the Tall Woman; but the joke ended in his receiving a found cudgeling from the [...]
[...] :for an highwayman would fooner plead diſtrefs as an excuſe for difcharging his piſtol, than mere wantonneſs and Frolick. Nor do the govern ments abroad entertain a better opinion of this [...]
Punch24.02.1866
  • Datum
    Samstag, 24. Februar 1866
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London; Bletchley
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] Government Bill for dealing with the Rinderpest. As those who are interested in the details of the F. law will study them in all their legal amplitude, Mr. Punch will merely state that as the Bill first stood, it provided for the slaughter and burial of diseased cattle, and for the isolation of suspected beasts. It prohibited the removal of cattle, by [...]
[...] graceful nor amusing, it is as well that the Oath (iſ honest gentlemen are to be asked to swear at all) should be a sensible one. SIR. GeoRGE GREY proposes that an M.P. shall merely swear to bear allegiance to his Queen and defend her against all conspiracies. MR. NewDEGATE sees objections to the innovation, reminds the House of Fenianism, and [...]
[...] course not. Never mind, or at least don't ask, Paterfamilia; until he shall have had time to consult his Cyclopaedia. Then he will tell you that it is the law which prevents persons from being imprisoned at the mere will of the Executive, and º: it is suspended only in cases of public peril. But then suspected persons may be arrested without cause or [...]
[...] facts from credible witnesses. The writer of the novel is a true artist, and while giving all these horrors, he is careful to supply evidence that they are merely the creation of the sable population with whom he gossips, and he displays real art in dressing up the crude conceptions of the blacks into sensational narrative. We trust the Tale of Horror [...]
[...] patrons are satisfied to convert alien Jews at £690 a-head (we think that was the last result of a comparison of the outlay with the number of convertites) we have no right to object. Merely as matter of busi ness, we assure them that the thing could be done cheaper in London, and as one convert is as good as another, we should think that Hounds [...]
[...] their children turned out very unlike their parents, what nice people some in the next generation would be . Shears. It is merely a sentimental question. . - Chaff. Partly, not merely. As far as justice or injustice is concerned, it is merely a sentimental, or, as sentimentalists say, a moral question. [...]
[...] spectacle of a duly re d †. mere orchestra, : like prof ther bad l dalise . by any º: ane swearing, or any other bad language, such as they perhaps [...]
Annals of oriental literatureNo. 1, P. 001 1820
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Januar 1820
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] augment. This a I cannot consider as a mere inflection, in the restricted meaning of the word, but it rather appears to have nothing to do with the root of the verb, and to be a foreign [...]
[...] credible that %fxtv originated from l/mere augment, which distinguishes also ia-rt from Jfa-rt. The S of the Latin root Es is changed into II in the im [...]
[...] of the first declension,* at least the supposition is rendered probable by the Latin using the termination rum, which is not merely confined to pronouns. The tendency for changing S into R is too conspicuous not to be observed, and therefore we cannot doubt that eram stands instead of esamf, which [...]
[...] Grecism. According to my opinion, it is more nearly connected with eramus, if restored to esamus, its original shape. But rather than with the Creek and Latin, it agrees with the Sanskrit asma (we were), from which it merely differs by an a, connecting the personal termination with the root Vol. I. D [...]
[...] into e, as it generally happens in the Sanskrit language. Second preterit tense.—Past time can also be indicated in Sanskrit by a mere internal inflection without having recourse to any thing foreign to the root, by the repetition of the first letter of the radical, which letter, when it is a consonant is [...]
[...] there exists some connexion between the reduplication and the augment, which then also would be a mere inflection, whilst, in its actual state, I consider it as an affix which had its proper signification. [...]
[...] verbs this genuine Sanskrit termination distinguishes the Doric dialect, the faithful preserver of the original forms. In the second person also, the Sanskrit termination si is merely confined to the verb substantive (ta-al); even the Doric dia lect has rejected the « in other verbs. There is another co [...]
[...] the Greek and Latin forms, irvir aa, vec sit (vexit).are com pounds, because their similarity with atmerely accidental.* But we do not even need to have recourse to the Sanskrit to prove the compound structure of the Greek and Latin pre [...]
[...] mood. As the usage of language chooses two different co pulas for the indicative and conjunctive, a greater dissimili tude is thereby produced between the moods than mere modal difference would require. • I consider the ancient infinitives in /nsvai as derived from the participles [...]
[...] striking similarity with the Anglo-Saxon beo, bys, byth, the future tense of the verb substantive, a similiarity not possible to be considered as merely accidental, because the Anglo- Saxon, belonging to the Teutonic stock, has a close affinity with the Sanskrit, and therefore also with the Latin. In the [...]
Saturday review25.09.1869
  • Datum
    Samstag, 25. September 1869
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] maintained a distinctive character in the midst of the dis tracted States to the south and to the west. Exempt from military revolutions, and with a merely nominal constitu tion, they had lived in peace and apparent prosperity, and the family which had long exercised supreme power seemed [...]
[...] demning, when directed against their own Government, what they have praised when directed against other Governments. To politicians who hold that the mere caprice or fancy of a people is a sufficient justification for the overthrow of its Government or the transfer of its allegiance, this contradiction [...]
[...] all events it is a charge which, as one easy to bring and hard to disprove, ought not to be brought against any man without very strong grounds. . Inconsistency, self-delusion, mere irreso lution and weakness, the mere imperfection, in short, of human nature, go a long way to account for a great deal which is often [...]
[...] would grudge to have at least a taste. But in ordinary households fidelity cannot flourish for want of its natural nourishment, and necessarily changes into mere honesty and good service while it lasts. The servant has a world of which master and mistress know nothing; the interests of master [...]
[...] retort, to compel him to silence under reproof, and yet to expect him to make our interests his main concern; it is idle not to see that he merely reconciles himself to silence and respect as Part of his contract, a condition to be submitted to till some [...]
[...] To those who do not object to an exceptionally unpleasant sea passage, and who do not want mere town amusements, the group of islands known as the Channel Islands will be found charming for a summer's holiday. They are full of interest for [...]
[...] attribute to the corona is among those already chronicled by Mr. Lockyer in the chromosphere spectrum. Confining ourselves merely to these considerations, this at all events is clear—that the eclipse of 1870 must be well observed. The new method, so far from rendering observations of eclipses un [...]
[...] the idea of a universal substance, always active and always an immanent cause of the universe, with whom creation is merely thought and self-development; that its world, instead of being purely material and distinct from God, is a manifestation of the divine substance following the invariable laws of thought [...]
[...] which broke the glass and furniture, but injured no one. The children were beside their mother at the time, but they did not move, and scarcely changed colour. The Countess merely gave them a look of approbation, and the meal was continued in the midst of the confusion. [...]
[...] would render the Imperial control little more than nominal. Meanwhile Englishmen, when they condescended to think at all of the colonies, thought of them as mere plantations for the benefit of English commerce. Their final cause was to grow tobacco, or to supply a market for English manufactures; and Lord Chatham [...]