831 examples of ib. in sentences

56: Report of the Sanitary Condition of the British Army, p 97. 57: Ib., p. 334.

Shortly afterwards Miss Burney records (ib.

2. [320] Perhaps Lord Errol was the Scotch Lord mentioned ante, iii. 170, and the nobleman mentioned ib.

Ib. These and such like are the manifest absurdities and contradictions of Transubstantiation; and we know that they are so, because we know the nature of a body, &c. Indeed!

how long will it be ere Christians take the plain middle road between intolerance and indifference, by adopting the literal sense and Scriptural import of heresy, that is, wilful error, or belief originating in some perversion of the will; and of heretics, (for such there are, nay, even orthodox heretics), that is, men wilfully unconscious of their own wilfulness, in their limpet-like adhesion to a favourite tenet?" Ib.

That this is his meaning, consult Plotinus. Ib. 9.

Or has any late Socinian divine discovered, that Do as ye would be done unto, is an interpolated precept? Ib.

Now I will answer for the Methodists' unhesitating assent and consent to it; but would the Barrister subscribe it? Ib.

9.] [Footnote 563: Ib. i. 22.

[380] "Il Papa diventato così pessima bestia," lib. i. 58; "Il Papa entrato in un bestial furore," ib. 60; "Quel povero uomo di Papa Clemente," ib. 103. Ib.

Guasti, p. 226. Guasti, p. 218. Ib.

See Saturday Review, 13 Apr. 1896; and see also ib., 19 Jan. 1895.]

" Ib., p. 228.

ib., ii, 352.

"The force of language consists in raising complete images; which have the effect to transport the reader, as by magic, into the very place of the important action, and to convert him as it were into a spectator, beholding every thing that passes."Id., ib., ii, 241.

" Ib., p. 153.

"Let them find courage to lay hold on the occasion."MILTON: ib.

"Of these, the Latin has six, the Greek, five, the German, four, the Saxon, six, the French, three, &c."Id., ib., p. 196.

Poets: ib., B. ii, l. 435.

With these views of the things, it is perhaps the less to be wondered at, that Walker, who appears to have been a candid and courteous writer, charges "that excellent scholar Mr. Forsterwith a total ignorance of the accent and quantity of his own language," (Ib., Note on §8; Key, p. 317;) and, in regard to accent, ancient or modern, elsewhere confesses his own ignorance, and that of every body else, to be as "total."

DESMOULINS, John, Johnson's will, witnesses, iv. 402, n. 2; bequest to him, ib.; mentioned, iv.

177, n. 2. DINNER, cost in London in 1737, i. 103,105; in 1746, i. 103, n. 2; in Edinburgh, in 1742, ib.; a measure of emotion, i. 355; ii. 94; iv. 220; waiting for it, ii. 83; better where there is no solid conversation, iii. 57.

427; v. 17, 440, n. 2; foenum habet in cornu, ii. 79; Foote describes him in Paris, ii. 403; foreigners, prejudice against, i. 129; iv. 15; described by Baretti and Reynolds, ib. n. 3, 169, n. 1; Boswell, v. 20: forgiving disposition, ii. 270; iv. 349, n. 2; shown to one who exceeded in wine, ii. 436; iv. 110; v. 259, n. 1; fortitude, iv.

Journey into North Wales, ii. 285; v. 427-460; Mrs. Piozzi's account of its publication, v. 427, n. 1; suppressions and corrections, ib.; inscription on blank leaf, iv. 299, n. 3.

(Mai, ib. Zonaras, 8, 19.)

831 examples of  ib.  in sentences