369 examples of mackintosh in sentences

He may be placed under a rain of ethical and philosophic ideas, and may be forced to put on a System of Thought, as men put on a mackintosh.

The canny Scot, whose name was Mackintosh, hesitated a few moments, then answered "Well, sir, you see the fishing-boat had sighted us, and we saw her turning back to port to fetch help.

I did not like Mackintosh.

Captain Mackintosh, too, had taken his bearings, and probably while I sat at dinner on board the Lola my keys had been stolen and passed on to the scarred Scotsman, who had promptly gone ashore and ransacked the place while I had remained with his master smoking and unsuspicious.

I'll write a full report in the morning if you will give me minute descriptions of the men, as well as of the captain, Mackintosh.

But what do you know of her?" "The captain, who gave his name to you as Mackintosh, is an undersized American of a rather low-down type?

Sir Samuel Romilly, Sir James Mackintosh, the Earl of Lansdowne, Mr. Wilberforce, all acknowledged the help obtained in their parliamentary efforts to amend the administration of the criminal law, in the facts and the experience supplied by her from her long and successful efforts in prison work.

He did not blaze like Macaulay or Mackintosh at the dinner-table, nor absorb conversation like Coleridge and Sydney Smith.

Macaulay was of Scotch descent, like so many eminent historians, poets, critics, and statesmen who adorned the early and middle part of the nineteenth century,Scott, Burns, Carlyle, Jeffrey, Dundas, Playfair, Wilson, Napier, Mackintosh, Robertson, Alison; a group of geniuses that lived in Edinburgh, and made its society famous,to say nothing of great divines and philosophers like Chalmers and Stewart and Hamilton.

Too bad, but it had to be, I suppose," agreed his chum, as he slipped into a mackintosh, for it was raining hard.

It is worth remarking, however, that neither Romilly, Mackintosh, nor Peel ever entertained the slightest doubt of the right of a government to inflict capital punishment.

In the last address which Mackintosh delivered to the grand-jury at Bombay he had said: "I have no doubt of the right of society to inflict the punishment of death on enormous crimes, wherever an inferior punishment is not sufficient.

[Footnote 187: "Life of Sir J. Mackintosh," by R.J. Mackintosh, ii., 110, 116.]

[Footnote 187: "Life of Sir J. Mackintosh," by R.J. Mackintosh, ii., 110, 116.]

CRABBE SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH MR.

SEE Stewart, A. W. STEWART, JOHN INNES MACKINTOSH.

John Innes Mackintosh Stewart (Michael Innes) (A); 1Feb67; R403492. STEWART, LETTIE ETHEL.

STEWART, JOHN INNES MACKINTOSH.

John Innes Mackintosh Stewart (Michael Innes) (A); 29Aug68; R442548.

" Out of a sagging pocket in her creased mackintosh she took a clothes brush.

Sir James Mackintosh said: "The whole fashionable and literary world is occupied with Madame de Staël, the most celebrated woman of this, or perhaps of any age."

The Gurneys, Wilberforce, Sir Samuel Romilly, Sir James Mackintosh, all worked vigorously against capital punishment, save, possibly, for murder.

John Mackintosh. SWITZERLAND.

But I noticed that each of them had on a mackintosh or some kind of cape, whereas Jone and I never thought of taking anything in the way of waterproof or umbrellas, as it was perfectly clear when we started.

The only thing that troubled me was the thought that if the water that poured off my mackintosh that day could have run into our cistern at home, it would have been a glorious good thing.

369 examples of  mackintosh  in sentences