671 examples of endowment in sentences
But awaking suddenly, and finding where he was, he was heard to burst into the loudest groans and lamentations on the miserable contrast of his present state; mixed with the meanest of his subjects; and subjected to the insolence of wretches a thousand times lower than himself in every kind of endowment.
With this wisdom of life is the equal endowment of imaginative and of lyric power.
Booth, Pauperism and the Endowment of Old Age (Macmillan).
Question of the Endowment of the Roman Catholic Clergy.
Before its dissolution, the same House of Commons had sanctioned the principle of a state endowment of the Roman Catholic clergy in Ireland, and had given a third reading to a bill for the abolition of all civil restrictions affecting members of that religion.
I shall conclude my remarks on this part of the subject by observing that the view which has been presented of the powers and character of the two Governments is supported by the marked difference which is observable in the manner of their endowment.
During the early part of the year, while Lord John was supporting in the House of Commons the endowment of the Maynooth College for priests and the establishment of colleges in other important Irish towns, Lady John was living at Unsted Wood, near Godalming, a house they had taken for the year.
I began to wonder what this man with such a lavish natural endowment would have done had he been trained.
It is evidenced most plainly in marriage selection; thus the black men generally marry women fairer than themselves; while, on the other hand, the dark women of stronger mental endowment are very often married to light-complexioned men; the effect is a tendency toward lighter complexions, especially among the more active elements in the race.
" As there does not appear from the bill to be any beneficiaries in existence to which this endowment can be applied, each State is required "to provide, within five years at least, not less than one college, or the grant to said State shall cease."
What the effect will be on these institutions of creating an indefinite number of rival colleges sustained by the endowment of the Federal Government it is not difficult to determine.
Wherefore, that man appears to me to have acquired an excellent endowment, who is superior to other men in that very thing in which men are superior to beasts.
Perhaps he is laboring for the endowment of some great literary or benevolent institution, for the building of a national monument.
The viciousness of most children is their only endowment, unless we add the poverty, the diseases and the hopelessness that go with it.
372; school, account of it in Johnson's time, i. 43-9; compared with Stourbridge School, i. 50; buildings dilapidated, i. 45, n. 4; endowment, v. 445, n. 3; famous scholars, i. 45; service for a sick woman, v. 444; Seward's, Miss, verses on it, iv. 331; St. Mary's Church repaired, i. 67; Johnson attends it in 1776, ii. 466; St. Michael's Church, graves of Johnson's parents and brother, iv.
CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (PWH); 3May66; R385267. RIDLEY, MAURICE ROY.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (PWH); 8Nov68; R448152. BURTON, JEAN.
CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE.
Prepared under the direction of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Division of Economics & History.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (PWH); 16Oct70; R493355.
(Monograph series of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Division of International Law, no. 5) © 15Jul42; A166217.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (PWH); 1Jul70; R487472.
Their union was followed by many years of happiness; and they closed a life of charity and benevolence by following the pious example of Guildeluec, who received Guilliadun into her order, while Eliduc took the cowl in a monastery, to the endowment of which he dedicated the remainder of his worldly possessions.
Textile and other manual training schools exist in some States, but have generally evoked the opposition of organized labor, and are more usually created by private endowment.