31 adjectives to describe monograph

(Harvard historical monographs, 3) © 21Jun34; A72931.

(Gynecological and obstetrical monographs)

(Supplementary education monographs, no.52, Oct. 1941)

What should we teach our pupils? Extracts and tables from a recent educational monograph.

(Gynecological and obstetrical monographs) © 29Sep23, A760147.

(Surgical monographs)

[Footnote 17: For details, see the admirable monograph of Henry Hitchcock, American State Constitutions, p. 53.]

The Child Study Society has published a little monograph on the subject giving the experience of different teachers and specimens of the writing.

To go at all thoroughly into all the questions that may be raised as to the date and character of the Christian writings in the early part of the second century would need a series of somewhat elaborate monographs, and, important as it is that the data should be fixed with the utmost attainable precision, the scaffolding thus raised would, in a work like the present, be out of proportion to the superstructure erected upon it.

It has been condensed from Dr. W. O. Atwater's valuable monograph on "Foods and Diet."

(Astrophysical monographs) © 10Sep40; A145280.

An accurate and diligent student of the ferns, his numerous articles were published in the Fern Bulletin, in the Torrey Bulletin, Rhodora, and in separate monographs.

By the way, have you seen Mr. Lea's splendid monograph (with colored plates) of Unios, in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society?" "Are we to have a narrative of the two expeditions in print?

the able monograph of Dr. Anton Koch, 1881.]

The thymus was introduced by the great classic monograph of Friedleben on the "Physiology of the Thymus," in which he mentioned the usual forgotten pioneers: Felix Plater, a Swiss physician, who in 1614 had found an enlarged thymus in an infant dying suddenly, and Restelli, an Italian, who interested himself in the effects of removal of the thymus more than ten years before.

It must, I think, have struck every reader of the Bishop's Life, whether in the three huge volumes of the authorized Biography or in the briefer but more characteristic monograph of Dean Burgon, that, though the biographers had themselves tasted and enjoyed to the full the peculiar flavour of his fun, they utterly failed in the attempt to convey it to the reader.

Markham, in his introduction to the volume of the Hakluyt Society for 1893, also accepts it; and our own honorary secretary (the late Sir John Bourinot), in his learned and exhaustive monograph on Cape Breton, inclines to the same theory.

Let us only succeed in delineating in brief monograph the outlines of a natural history of the British Laurel,Laurea nobilis, sempervirens, florida,and in posting here and there, as we go, a few landmarks that shall facilitate the surveys of investigators yet unborn, and this our modest enterprise shall be happily fulfilled.

He laid his arms on the massive monograph, rested his forehead on them and murmured cheerfully that he should now be quite comfortable until the morning.

The firm of Black and Green will shortly publish Lord DYSART'S monumental monograph on China Tea: the Universal Antidote.

He was wrapped up in his rugs and his head rested on his beloved monograph.

Venice especially outdid all her rivals, and printed an account of the Queen of the Adriatic, embracing history, topography, science in all its branches, and artistic story, in four huge and magnificent volumes, which remains to the present day by far the best topographical monograph that any city of the peninsula possesses.

40-45; the sole monograph on Loeben by Raimund Pissin.

[Footnote: The character of Heracles in connexion with the Kômos, already indicated by Wilamowitz and Dieterich (Herakles, pp. 98, ff.; Pulcinella, pp. 63, ff.), has been illuminatingly developed in an unpublished monograph by Mr. J.A.K. Thomson, of Aberdeen.]

and sometimes profoundly suggestive monographs; but I cannot leave the subject without a special word of gratitude to my friend, Dr. Herbert Adams, the editor of the series, for the noble work which he is doing in promoting the study of American history.

31 adjectives to describe  monograph