935 examples of locke in sentences

Mr. Locke's opinion.

Mr. Locke's opinion in favor of bread for young children, and against the use of animal food.

R75365, 26Feb51, Florence Bingham Livingston (A) LOCKE, GLADYS EDSON.

R77192, 18Apr51, Gladys E. Locke (A) LODGE, Sir OLIVER JOSEPH.

SEE Poe, Edgar Allan. STANDISH, BURT L. Lefty Locke, owner.

THE WORLD book; edited by M. V. O'Shea and George H. Locke.

R121641, 3Dec53, Philena F. Locke (C) Calculus, p. 1-111.

R121640, 3Dec53, Philena F. Locke (C) FINLEY, JOHN, ed.

R117632, 21Sep53, A. K. Lobeck (A) LOCKE, PHILENA F. Calculus.

SEE Fine, Henry B. LOCKE, WILLIAM JOHN.

SEE Locke, William John.

SEE Locke, William John.

SEE Laveille, A. LOCKE, WILLIAM J. Joshua's vision.

"There is but one letter about Mr. Locke," he wrote to M. de Cideville; "the only philosophical matter I have treated of in it is the little trifle of the immortality of the soul, but the thing is of too much consequence to be treated seriously.

Mr. Locke, in his Treatise of Human Understanding, has spent two Chapters upon the Abuse of Words.

You may easily imagine the Confusion of the Entertainer, who finding some of his Friends very uneasy, desired to tell them a Story of a great Man, one Mr, Locke (whom I find you frequently mention) that being invited to dine with the then Lords Hallifax, Anglesey, and Shaftsbury; immediately after Dinner, instead of Conversation, the Cards were called for, where the bad or good Success produced the usual Passions of Gaming.

Mr. Locke retiring to a Window, and writing, my Lord Anglesey desired to know what he was writing: Why, my Lords, answered he, I could not sleep last Night for the Pleasure and Improvement I expected from the Conversation of the greatest Men of the Age.

"Belasco and Hypnotism" (Locke's "The Case of Becky"), pp.

To be sure, the inelegancies with which we are chiefly reproached are not distinctively American: Burke uses "pretty considerable"; Miss Burney says, "I trembled a few"; the English Bible says "reckon," Locke has "guess," and Southey "realize," in the exact senses in which one sometimes hears them used colloquially here.

BUSBY, RICHARD, distinguished English schoolmaster, born at Lutton, Lincolnshire; was head-master of Winchester School; had a number of eminent men for his pupils, among others Dryden, Locke, and South (1606-1695).

What do you say, Mrs. Morgeson, will you let her come to my house for a year?" "Locke decides for Cassy," she answered; "I never do now," looking at me reproachfully.

Locke Morgeson sounded familiarly, he said; a member of his mother's family named Somers had married a gentleman of that name.

Cousin Charles was surprised and a little vexed that the doctor had never told him, when he must have known that he had been anxiously looking up the Morgeson pedigree; but the doctor declared he had not thought of it before, and that only the name of Locke had recalled it to his mind.

Locke Morgeson had been insolvent for five years.

" "From to-day?" "No, that will be the date of the wreck of the Locke Morgeson; but three weeks from to-morrow.

935 examples of  locke  in sentences