97 adjectives to describe extract

The word capitulum comes from the Latin, and means a little chapter, a heading, a beginning, an abridgment, because this little chapter is a little lesson, a brief extract from Sacred Scripture, the head or the beginning of the Epistle of the Mass of the Feast (Gavantus, Bona).

To these are added very copious extracts from the manuscript of Damascius,[30]

"Carnos" being a fluid extract, is especially handy.

The literary education of woman has too often fallen into the fault of our "Elegant Extracts," and "Beauties of British Poetry."

If rather dry, pour some tomato sauce, diluted extract, gravy, &c., over.

Numerous extracts are given, sufficient to show that the poem is at any rate a creditable piece of writing.

With stock or even a little extract, a very good lentil or pea soup may be made at a few minutes' notice by thickening with "Digestive" Pea Flour or lentil flour, as the case may be.

Add dessertspoonful grated onion, teaspoonful chopped parsley, pinch herbs or mace, salt, white pepper, 1/2 teaspoonful "Extract," and some mushroom ketchup.

A trace of the same superstition existed in Scotland, as may be gathered from the subjoined extract from the "Scottish Statistical Report" of the year 1796, in connection with New parish:"There is a quick thorn of a very antique appearance, for which the people have a superstitious veneration.

The latter has a particularly valuable extract from the now lost Maya Dictionary of F. Gabriel de San Buenaventura.

That we are playing here with no phantasy is proven by the fact that we can effect changes of tastes as well as of intellectual direction by appropriate feeding of various glandular extracts.

" A careful study of Bryant's work increased my desire to sift that of Thornton, for I had been told that it not only contained the "Fallon Diary," but lengthier extracts from the Star, and I wanted to compare and analyze those details which had been published as "Thrilling Events in California History."

d'Inguimbert and de la Plane, enriched by numerous curious extracts from these unpublished Memoirs, no part of which has previously appeared in print.

On the right and left of Mrs. B., and at the opposite corners from us, sit two other guests, one a colored merchant, and the other a young son-in-law of Mr. B., whose face is the very double extract of blackness; for which his intelligence, the splendor of his dress, and the elegance of his manners, can make to be sure but slight atonement!

THE CALFThe flesh of this animal is called veal, and when young, that is, under two months old, yields a large quantity of soluble extract, and is, therefore, much employed for soups and broths.

The Second of "the Spirit of the Annuals," containing a fine Engraving, after a celebrated picture by Turner, and a string of POETICAL GEMS from the Anniversary, Keepsake, and Friendship's Offering, with unique extracts from such of "the Annuals" as were not noticed in the previous Supplement.

Now, as this juice is pure extract of meat, containing albumen, osmazome, and other valuable principles, it follows that meat which has been preserved by the action of salt can never have the nutritive properties of fresh meat.

If this summary of the Cherokee population, from the census, is correct, to say nothing of those of foreign extract, we find that in six years the increase has been 3,563 souls.

In the intervals between dances he regaled him with interminable extracts from speeches made at the debating society and recitations learned at school.

From a late letter of a friend in America, I make the following extract relative to the present condition of Texas.

" We see from these remarkable extracts that the wisest of the heathen had, by God's grace, attained to the sense that life was subject to a divine guidance.

No further recommendation can be requisite; but to give the reader some idea of the vivid style in which the work is written, we detach two episodal extracts.

[As Sir Walter Scott's new work has not reached us in time to enable us to fill in the outline of the story in our present Number, we give a few sketchy extracts, or portraits,such as will increase the interest for the appearance of the Narrative.

She thought well to begin the story by giving some explanatory 'Extracts from a Traveler's Journal' relative to Italian customs, but afterward she depended entirely on me for all points concerning distinctive national characteristics and the general Italian atmosphere.

" That the Duke maintained his interest in the Quarterly is shown by a subsequent extract: Mr. Lockhart to John Murray.

97 adjectives to describe  extract