68 Metaphors for text

His text was Psalm li.

Dealers should furnish a fair display to our books and explain to customers that their text is not only good reading but also that the stories are based on actual experiences of the author who wasted thirty years on the Road.

" The text was Psalm xix.

The earliest recorded text is a broadside, of about 1650, in the Roxburghe collection (III. 142).

Here the verb is agrees regularly with the noun desire, and with that only; the whole text being merely a simple sentence, and totally irrelevant to the doctrine which it accompanies.

Their noun brim'fulness, with a like accent, is also a corruption; and the text of Shakspeare, which they quote for it, is nonsense, unless brim, be there made a separate adjective: "With ample and brimfulness of his force.

The text of the whole series will be an exact reprint of the last English Edition.

The text of "The Stones" is Venice, and the design of the volumes, in the author's words, is to show that the Gothic architecture of Venice "had arisen out of, and indicated, a state of pure domestic faith and national virtue;" while its renaissance architecture "had arisen out of and indicated a state of concealed national infidelity and domestic corruption."

In the list of errata, in the edition of 1820 "one child" is corrected, and made "a child"; but the text remained "one child" in all subsequent editions.

As schoolmaster he translated the Odyssey into Latin, in order that the Latin text might form the basis of his Latin, as the Greek text was the basis of his Greek, instruction; and this earliest of Roman school-books maintained its place in education for centuries.

O what a fine coat and cloke for an hypocrite will a text of scripture, properly applied, make at any time in the eyes of the pious!how easily are the good folks taken in!]and all my delight, added he, for some years past, has been in cultivating my paternal estate.

Leaving these on one side, and desirous mainly of collecting every alternative reading in all the Quartos and in the two Folios, the text used in the preparation of the present edition, chosen after careful consideration, is that of the Second Folio, obvious printers' errors being corrected, recorded in the Appendix, and indicated in the text by the insertion of square brackets.

2 for his text; viz., "And one told JACOB, and said, 'Behold, thy son JOSEPH cometh unto thee!'" presently perceived, and made it out to his people, that his Text was "a spiritual Dial.

[Footnote E: Chaucer's text is: 'This litel child his litel book lernynge As he sat in the schole in his primere.' Ed.]

He told us his text was Romans vi. 23, 'The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.'

The received (and best) text is [Greek: eis marturion autois].

Dis is whut his text would be: "Mind yo mistress."

The text is apparently a dialogue, which was chanted as strophe and antistrophe, the one singer speaking for the King, the other for the bard himself.

The Doctor's text was, "Let me first go and bury my father," &c. Without at all noticing the context,an omission which I regretted,he proceeded at once to state the doctrine of the text to be, that nothing can excuse the putting off of religionthat it is every man's duty to follow Christ immediately.

His text was John v. 23: "That all men should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father," &c. His divisions were I.

The "texts and intentions" may be an aid to them, and to students in Holy Orders, in the great and glorious work of pious prayer.

This, dated Boston, October 5th, 1736, was in Latin, and I give the extract here, of which the text is a translation.

Ladies in situations such as these were known as nayikas and the text embodying the standard classification was the Sanskrit treatise, the Bharatiya Natya Sastra.

Perfect forms of parsing and correcting should be given him as models, with the understanding that the text before him is his only guide to their right application.

The interior is most chaste and tasteful, as different from the usual Roman Catholic interior as is the outside from the general exterior, the texts on the pillars near the entrance being quite an unusual feature.

68 Metaphors for  text