68 examples of mecum in sentences

Inter erroris salebrosa longi, Inter ignotae strepitus loquelae, Quot modis mecum, quid agat, requiro, Thralia

valet de place, cicerone, pilot, guide; guidebook, handbook; vade mecum

school book, horn book, text book; grammar, primer, abecedary^, rudiments, manual, vade mecum; encyclopedia, cyclopedia; Lindley Murray, Cocker; dictionary, lexicon. professorship, lectureship, readership, fellowship, tutorship; chair.

To be self-sufficient, to be all in all to oneself, to want for nothing, to be able to say omnia mea mecum portothat is assuredly the chief qualification for happiness.

Dies noctesque ames me, me desideres, Me somnies, me expectes, me cogites, Me speres, me te oblectes, mecum tota sis, Meus fac postremo animus, quando ego sum tuus.

" But all this needed not, you will say; if she affect once, she will be his, settle her love on him, on him alone, "illum absens absentem Auditque videtque" she can, she must think and dream of nought else but him, continually of him, as did Orpheus on his Eurydice, "Te dulcis conjux, te solo in littore mecum, Te veniente die,

Brutes may be, and are scions, but those beings only, who have an I, 'scire possunt hoc vel illud una cum seipsis'; that is, 'conscire vel scire aliquid mecum', or to know a thing in relation to myself, and in the act of knowing myself as acted upon by that something.

He can scarcely be blamed for this negligence; he was studying his vade-mecum.

In short, I would always be understood to write my Papers of Criticism in the Spirit which Horace has expressed in those two famous Lines; Si quid novisti rectius istis, Candidus imperti; si non, his utere mecum, If you have made any better Remarks of your own, communicate them with Candour; if not, make use of these I present you with.

This is the origin of our saying mecum and tecum, not cum me, and cum te, so that they too might be like nobiscum and vobiscum.

It is really a vade-mecum, small, cheap, and useful to a degree no one can fully appreciate until it has been thoroughly tried.

The former cannot, at the tender age of his professional life, digest the ponderous masses of ocular lore which adorn the shelves of the maturer student's library; and the latter, while he is glad to have these elaborate works at his command for reference, is refreshed by a perusal of a few pages of the more unpretending, but not less valuable vade-mecum.

"Fuit assiduus mecum," he says a little farther on.

This prophecy of Noah is the vade mecum of slaveholders, and they never venture abroad without it.

This prophecy of Noah is the vade mecum of slaveholders, and they never venture abroad without it; it is a pocket-piece for sudden occasion, a keepsake to dote over, a charm to spell-bind opposition, and a magnet to draw to their standard "whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lie."

You are merely my Oedipus, the vade mecum of my unsentimental journey.

SEE Baldwin's law students' vade-mecum.

BALDWIN'S LAW STUDENTS' VADE-MECUM, by William Edward Baldwin.

SEE Baldwin's law students' vade-mecum.

BALDWIN'S LAW STUDENTS' VADE-MECUM, by William Edward Baldwin.

B. Mecum, of Ripley, Iowa, John W. Plummer, of Tulon, Ill., Edward Bartholomew, Urban P. Davidson, John Crosscup and L. Dow Stephens, of San Jose, California, Harrison Frans and Thomas Shannon, of Los Gatos, Cal., J.W. Brier and wife, Lodi, Cal., three children of Mr. Brier.

The compilation is not very skilfully done, so that we pass from the minutiæ of a priest's vade mecum in a highly developed hierarchical period to the civil statutes of a rude patriarchal society, whose very crimes are archaic.

What the Epistle to the Romans, that affrighting vade mecum of theological disputants, becomes when read thus reasonably as a whole, with critical discernment of its real aim, I will not try to tell you; but will content myself with sending you where you may see it beautifully told, with Paul's own upspringing inspiration of righteousness in Matthew Arnold's "St. Paul and Protestantism.

It subsequently rose to eightpence; and in the time of George I. the "Vade Mecum for Malt Worms (1720)" speaks of the landlord of The Bell, in Carter Lane, raising his tariff to tenpence.

During this period, too, there came into his possession the "Young Man's Companion," an English vade-mecum of then enormous popularity, written "in a plain and easy stile," the title states, "that a young Man may attain the same, without a Tutor."

68 examples of  mecum  in sentences