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Examples
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I call thefe two Periods, firom the two greateftGc 'niufes that flourifbed in each, one the Socratic Period, the other the Ciceeonxan.
Hermes; 1771
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Of late, as the matter of which thefe belts are made is grown I N A M E R I G A. 359 grown fcarce, they often give fome fkin in place of the wampum, for fo they call thefe beads, and re - ceive in return prefents of a more valuable nature; for they never confider what our commiffioners fay to be of any weight, unlefs a prefent accompanies each propofal.
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For Bacis calls thefe people Ti - thorenfes; but Herodotus fays, that when die Barbarians invaded this country, the inhabitants fled to the fummit of PamafTus ', and he calls the city Neon, and the fummit of Pamafius Tithorea.
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CORRECTIONS and A D D I T I O N S* being therein prayed for as queen, entirely confute the idea of thefe in par - ticular having been prefented to her in the tower.
Typographical antiquities: an historical account of printing in England ... 1790
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The Arabs always call thefe people Farangah, the Englifh tranflation of Keating in his ufual ftile, will have this to be f ranee.
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And look on wealth with nndefiring eyes P When thou can ft truly call thefe virtues thine,
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And this thou haft skipped over, as a deceitfuil child, with a poore excufe, which thou may be afhamed to call thefe railings, but that thy heart is void of
Truth, the strongest of all, witnessed forth in the spirit of truth, against all deceit: and ... 1657
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•the natives ftole fome of his goods, which cauled him to name thefe idmds 'the Ladrones, or Iflands of Thieves.
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«rs; for, however enlightened we may call thefe days, all competent judges of t the mat - ter will I believe readily acknowledge that in the lafl Century, and in the beginning of this, there was much more found and Jolid Erudition then than w? find at frtfent: — In the room of it there is fucceeding another fpecies, fhowy indeed and fplendid, but vain, empty, pernicious.
Letters Concerning Education: Addressed to a Gentleman Entering at the ... 1785
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It would be dill worfe to aflfociate the financial receipts with the affignatSj and put them in com -- petition, by giving the creditors their choice of either kind of thefe papers, one of which fhould be free, but bear intcreft; while the other fhould bear no intereft, but have a forced circulation*
Considerations on the Present and Future State of France Charles Alexandre de Calonne 1791
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