1510 examples of cataloguing in sentences

But more remarkable still, Le Monnier, of Paris, had observed it eight times in one month, cataloguing it each time as a different star.

Professor Challis said he would conduct the search himself, and shortly began a leisurely and dignified series of sweeps around the place designated by theory, cataloguing all the stars he observed, intending afterward to sort out his observations, compare one with another, and find out whether any one star had changed its position; because if it had it must be the planet.

Actuated probably by the knowledge that in such matters as cataloguing and mapping Germany was then, as now, far ahead of all the other nations, he wrote in September (the same year that Sir John Herschel delivered his eloquent address at Southampton) to Berlin.

We need sorely to reconsider what faith really is, and when we have recovered in some measure that knowledge of it in experience, which declared its unspeakable worth in the early Church and in later periods of ecclesiastical history which stand out before all others, we shall look back upon our past distrust of God and His promises with shame and wonderment, and proceed to revise our cataloguing of spiritual values and degrees of sin.

It is strange to hear them catalogue the proved cases of corruption amongst officials of other countries.

In the English edition of this work, the first part of this chapter is devoted to examples of Portable and fixed Agricultural engines, of different makers and styles of workmanship, but not in sufficient detail, nor illustrated on large enough scale to be of practical value as models, forming rather in fact an illustrated catalogue of the manufacturer, than a study for the mechanic.

There would be no end, if I were to catalogue the schemes of which these are a specimen.

These are all common flowers, and easily observed; and the catalogue might be increased by rare ones, as the white corydalis, the smaller yellow violet, (V. rotundifolia,) and the claytonia or spring-beauty.

Such a sacrifice as this marriage clearly belonged in the catalogue of impossibilities.

I, therefore, went northward, till I came to the British Museum, the cataloguing-system of which I knew well, and passed in.

A catalogue of the members has been published, which includes 1,291 names, besides corresponding members.

If it were required to designate the owners of this species of property among them, it would be little more than a catalogue of slaveholders.'

But the catalogue of enormities is too long to be recapitulated in the present address.

These twelve, therefore, I either reject entirely from my catalogue, or divide and simplify to fit them for their purpose.

His commonplace books, on the entries in which and the indexing he was accustomed to spend one whole day out of each week, cataloguing the notes of his multifarious reading and pasting in cuttings from newspapers likely to be useful in novel-building, completely filled one of the rooms in his house.

Etchings and drypoints; an illustrated and descriptive catalogue, compiled and arranged by Adam E. M. Paff.

Talavera pottery; with a catalogue of the collection of the Hispanic Society of America.

Catalogue of publications.

MURPHY, WILLIAM J. Catalogue no.110, 1946.

Catalogue of Hebrew and Yiddish manuscripts and books from the library of Sholem Asch presented to Yale University by Louis M. Rabinowitz.

The angel at the bookit was one of countless volumes, like the British Museum Reading-room Catalogue, glanced at us and seemed to count us in the instant.

The witch, in "Macbeth," cataloguing the calamities in store for the ambitious Thane, says: "Sleep shall neither night nor day Hang upon his pent-house lid; He shall live a man forbid.

I had the curiosity to see what happens in the libraries of the United States; and theresupposing the system of cataloguing and enumeration to be the samethey are a trifle more serious in their taste than we are; where our average is about 70 per cent, at a place like Chicago it is only about 60 per cent.

SIMON, RICHARD, a celebrated French biblical scholar, born at Dieppe; entered the Congregation of the Oratory in 1659, and became professor of Philosophy at the College of Juilly; was summoned to Paris, and under orders of his superiors spent some time in cataloguing the Oriental MSS.

He took Linnæus into his house and gave him a ducat a day for writing his menu and cataloguing his collection.

1510 examples of  cataloguing  in sentences