149 adjectives to describe survey

Now I go downstairs for a brief survey of the private apartments of the late King.

SEE Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander Louis. DEMING, Horace G. SEE General chemistry; an elementary survey.

Then he stopped before the house and made a careful survey of it.

I gave the thing a critical survey under his grave regard, then applauded the workmanship and hoped him a prosperous season with the melons.

The real causes lie far deeper, and can only be properly understood on the basis of an historical survey.

The government being aware of the requirements and possibilities of the country, has undertaken the task of making preliminary surveys for trails and railroads, and no doubt in the near future the avenue for better and quicker transportation facilities will be opened up.]

The cause of this favorable decision on the part of Wattawamat was the report that Coubitant had just sent him of the insignificant force of the English, which that crafty and swift-footed warrior had contrived to ascertain, by running round the border of the weed to the place where Standish's men were at work, and taking an accurate and unobserved survey of their numbers.

The University of Michigan, an encyclopedic survey.

In the official chronology of the United States Geological Surveywhich is no more nor less reliable than that of other geological surveys, because all are alike mere approximations to the truththe Sequoia was a well developed race 10,000,000 of years ago.

From a rapid survey, my glance passed quickly upward along the slopes of the circling mountains.

Hit was AugustbutO-o-h, hot enough to fry eggs on a shingle, the day I tramped down to Cottonville with them specimens; and here it is"he threw up his head and took a comprehensive survey of the grove about him"airly springMarch,

And I had just completed a hasty survey of the region, and made my way down to winter quarters, when one of the grandest flood-storms that I ever saw broke on the mountains.

During his stay among the Mandans he had been able to lay down the Missouri according to courses and distances taken on his passage up it, corrected by frequent observations of longitude and latitude, and to add to the actual survey of this portion of the river a general map of the country between the Mississippi and Pacific from the thirty-fourth to the fifty-fourth degree of latitude.

JANNEY, J. ELLIOTT. Life: a psychological survey.

SEE STEWART, JOHN I. M. INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS; an annual survey, 1942.

Introductory survey and marriage.

The history of cathedral and city is intelligently set forth and accompanied by a descriptive survey of the building in all its detail.

Cook utilised this time to make a thorough survey of Halifax Harbour, the notes of which are now in the United Service Museum, Whitehall.

The following table offers at least a statistical survey: (1) Racial Austria.

After a deliberate survey of his audience, the preacher spoke: "Brev'eren an' sisters, I see afore me Brudder Bill Hines, who kin read de Bible,

[Footnote 1: From the remaining Schopenhauer literature (F. Laban has published a chronological survey of it, 1880) we may call attention to the critiques of the first edition of the chief work by Herbart and Beneke, and that of the second edition by Fortlage (Jenaische Litteratur Zeitung, 1845, Nos. 146-151); J.E. Erdmann Herbart und Schopenhauer, eine Antithese (Zeitschrift für Philosophie, 1851); Wilh.

I ran repeatedly down the avenue, and finally mounted with a pocket-telescope to the top of the house for a more extensive survey.

" He paused to adjust his glasses, which were in the very act of falling from his nose, and hitch up his gown, while he took a leisurely survey of the jury, as though he were estimating their impressionability.

"Herr Struve's mission in England is to see if he can connect the trigonometrical surveys of the two countries.

Once more the busy little Mermaid sailed from Sydney on the 8th of May, 1819, to make a running survey of the east coast.

149 adjectives to describe  survey