36437 examples of changes in sentences

Periodically the city is rent and upheaved in unison with the surrounding changes of tide.

At Kelso Harry procured changes of garments, attiring himself as a Lowland farmer, and his companions as two drovers.

Rome, Greece, Egypt, and all that we know of the past, which comes purely of man and his passions; empires, dynasties, heresies and novelties, come and go like the changes of the seasons; while the only thing that can be termed stable, is the slow but sure progress of prophecy.

Since Momus comes to laugh below, Old time begin the show, That he may see, in every scene, What changes in this age have been.

why should vain man pursue, With endless toil, each object that is new, And for the seeming substance leave the true? Why should he quit for hopes his certain good, And loathe the manna of his daily food? Must England still the scene of changes be, Tost and tempestuous, like our ambient sea? Must still our weather and our wills agree?

To please Dalberg he set the action back from the eighteenth to the sixteenth century and made many minor changes.

Supplement of 1938 to The law of attachment in New Jersey, showing changes in attachment law of New Jersey revised statutes, 1937.

If, when it barely pays to work a mine, such changes occur, gold becomes worth less, and the poorer mines eventually must go out of use.

Now the monetary prices of the various commodities are constantly changing, and in somewhat different degrees, but on the average there may be a general trend upward or downward, and this is called a change in the general scale (or level) of prices, as contrasted with changes in the values of any two commodities in terms of each other.

The general price level will be more fully discussed below (Chapter 6, section 3) in connection with the method of measuring by index numbers its changes.

Our question now is: What is the effect of changes in the quantity of money (considered apart from chance accompanying changes) upon the general level of prices? § 9.

Our question now is: What is the effect of changes in the quantity of money (considered apart from chance accompanying changes) upon the general level of prices? § 9.

This explanation of the effect of changes in the quantity of money in a country upon prices (the general scale of prices) is known as the quantity theory of money.

That is, prices rise and fall in direct proportion to changes in the total quantity.

P, therefore, changes directly with either M or R, or inversely with N. § 11.

(1) It does not mean that the price level changes with the absolute quantity of money, independently of growth of population and of the corresponding growth in the volume of exchanges.

These changes require, some larger, others smaller, per capita amounts of money to maintain the same level of prices.

The quantity theory makes intelligible the great and rapid changes in prices which have followed sudden changes in the quantity of money.

The quantity theory makes intelligible the great and rapid changes in prices which have followed sudden changes in the quantity of money.

The changes in gold production here shown have bearings not only upon problems of money, but in some respects upon nearly every modern economic problem.

Compare in the present connection this figure with Figure 3, in Chapter 6, Section 4, showing changes in index numbers of prices.

As soon as it is decided that we are to retain the islands it will be necessary to make a careful study of the sources of revenue and items of expenses for all the islands, with a view to thoroughly understanding the subject, before introducing the extensive changes which will be necessary.

Or have life's changes borne her far from here, And far from rest, and far from help and home?

How self-immured he was; for all our converse I gathered little, little, of his life, A bitter trial to me, who love to learn The changes of men's outer circumstance, The strokes that fate has shaped them with, and so, Fitting to these their present speech and favour, Discern the thought within.

Wisest is he, who, never quite secure, Changes his thoughts for better day by day: To-morrow some new light will shine, be sure,

36437 examples of  changes  in sentences