148 adjectives to describe publication

(Yale historical publications.

" Near this is the tomb of Dr. Rose, many years distinguished as a critic in a respectable periodical publication.

Pickwick was written, at the suggestion of an editor, for serial publication.

This valuable publication is a digest of the laws relating to game in all the Western States and Territories.

The interior is one of the utmost taste and luxury, and the house is now occupied by Judge and Mrs. Hanna, who are the editors of the Christian Science Journal, a monthly publication, and to whose courtesy I am much indebted for some of the data of this paper.

He was exasperated beyond measure when incendiary publications were transmitted through Southern mails.

] I have carefully searched the official publications of the Central Powers (Germany's White Book; Austria's Orange Book), and can find no record in them of any pacific action on Germany's part in either of the European capitals; hence the claims made in the above article seem to be an exaggeration.

ORGANIC SYNTHESES; an annual publication of satisfactory methods for the preparation of organic chemicals.

It was about the time that the Charleston Post-office was plundered by a mob of several thousand people, and all the anti-slavery publications there found were made a bonfire of in the street; and where "the clergy of all denominations attended in a body, lending their sanction to the proceedings, and adding by their presence to the impressive character of the scene."

His first separate publication was, Advice, a satire, in the autumn of this year.

After narrowly escaping the loss of his lands and slaves in 1840 through his endorsement of other men's notes, he launched into experimental farming and agricultural publication.

On the last page of "Letters from a Lady of Quality to a Chevalier" Chetwood had also advertised for speedy publication "a Book entitled, The Danger of giving way to Passion, in Five Exemplary Novels:

No greater mistake was ever made than the supposition that PUNCHINELLO is to be assailed with impunity by rival publications.

The variety and splendour of Johnson's attainments, the peculiarities of his character, his private virtues, and his literary publications, fill me with confusion and dismay, when I reflect upon the confined and difficult species of composition, in which alone they can be expressed, with propriety, upon his monument.'

To the animadversions in the periodical Journals of criticism, and in the numerous publications to which my book has given rise, I have made no answer.

It must be remembered that 'The Prelude' itself was a posthumous publication; and also that the fragmentary canto of 'The Recluse', entitled "Home at Grasmere"as well as the other canto published in 1886, and entitled (most prosaically) "Composed when a probability existed of our being obliged to quit Rydal Mount as a residence"were not published by the poet himself.

The work of the years 1860 and 1861 consisted chiefly of two treatises, only one of which was intended for immediate publication.

(Briegel theoretical publication, no. 1) © 16May33; AA122216. George F. Briegel, Inc. (PWH); 5May61; R275487.

(Miscellaneous publications of the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, v. 1, 1928)

A contemporary publication, the LONDON MAGAZINE, feigned to give the debates of the Roman senate, and adapted Roman titles to the several speakers.

He assigned no reason for quitting those he had occupied in Shoreditch; but Sir Herbert Croft supposes, not without probability, that it was in order to be nearer to the places of public entertainment, to which his employment as a writer for ephemeral publications, obliged him to resort.

When, in addition to his novels, we consider his various productions, his histories, his travels, his two dramatic pieces, his poems, his translations, his critical labours, and other occasional publications, we are surprised that so much should have been done in a life of no longer continuance.

If you think the following observations conformable to the plan of your useful and entertaining publication, perhaps you may be induced to give them a place, or notice the subject I have in view, in some other way.

A friend told me that they had copied from the cheap publications of America.

There is also a phrase in a letter to Mr. Ollier, written on 14 May, 1820, before the actual publication of the Lamia volume: 'Keats, I hope, is going to show himself a great poet; like the sun, to burst through the clouds which, though dyed in the finest colours of the air, obscured his rising.' Keats died in Rome on 23 February, 1821.

148 adjectives to describe  publication