Do we say play or extreme

play 20305 occurrences

312; let nobody attack him, i. 27, n. 2, 393, n. 1; iii. 70, 312, n. 1; in the Lichfield play-house, ii. 299; low opinion of his acting, ii. 92, n. 4; iii.

[Illustration] Sometimes the vapor is condensed by being allowed to play against the inside of a conical cover which is adapted to a saucepan, and is kept cool by the external application of cold water; and in this case the still takes the form represented by the subjoined diagrams; such compact and portable stills being largely employed in Ireland for the private manufacture of whisky.

In addition to this capital defect, it is regrettable that it is necessary to shake the flask that contains the solution after every insufflation of air, and also that the play of the valves soon becomes imperfect.

That torpedoes will play an important part in the next naval war is evident from the fact that great activity is being displayed by the various governments of the world in the construction of this weapon.

1942 bidding and play.

NM: pref., general introd., introd., notes to each play & new translations of 13 plays.

How to write a play; the principles of play construction applied to creative writing and to the understanding of human motives.

How to write a play.

SEE Wilson, Frank E. GOREN, CHARLES H. Better bridge for better players; the play of the cards.

Susanna, 1653; a critical edition of the Latin text with a study of the play and its influence on Bruey's Gabinie, 1699.

Jacland Marmur (A); 5Sep69; R467902. Double play.

Bob Hope (A); 28Jun71; R508225. HOPKINS, GERARD. Work and play.

How to play Rumenu.

SEE Wilson, Frank E. GOREN, CHARLES H. Better bridge for better players; the play of the cards.

The blues and how to play 'em.

Simple as was the usual diet at Cherbury the cook was permitted on Sunday full play to her art, which, in the eighteenth century, indulged in the production of dishes more numerous and substantial than our refined tastes could at present tolerate.

And I cannot help thinking your ladyship has not been looking so well of late, and a little society would do your ladyship good; and Miss Venetia too, after all, she wants a playfellow; I am certain sure that I was as tired of playing at ball with her this morning as if I had never sat down in my born days; and I dare say the little lord will play with her all day long.'

'There was a little play last Christmas,' continued Mrs. Cadurcis, 'and he acted quite delightfully.

When the hours of study were past, the children, with that zest for play which occupation can alone secure, would go forth together, and wander in the park.

They strolled about some time, until Plantagenet at length took it into his head that he should like to learn to play at bowls; and he said, if Venetia would wait in the grotto, where they then were talking, he would run back and ask the Doctor if the servant might teach him.

I do not want to play at bowls now,' added Plantagenet; 'let us go and see the cows.'

"There has been foul play then!"

Are you going to play snap-dragon?

Isn't it a significant thing that, within a year of his coming into the title and estates, two highly mysterious individuals turn up here, and that all this foul play ensues?

"There's been foul play!

extreme 5334 occurrences

"Some moralists," says the average young man of the world, "in their extreme regard for personal purity, will not admit that any act of unchastity is necessary, even to protect one's health, or as an act of love.

"You are distinguished more than you think," said Shirley, "for Mrs. Pryor often tantalises me by the extreme caution of her judgments.

Less extreme, though akin in nature, is the contrast between the feelings which the history of Englishmen has recorded within a few centuries.

Again, peoples who have emerged from the primitive family-and-clan organization, hold that one who is guilty of a crime must himself bear the punishment, and it is thought extreme injustice that the punishment should fall upon any one else.

In the same year he told another correspondent: "In my most extreme fluctuations I have never been an atheist in the sense of denying the existence of a God.

In Ericsson, however, this characteristic was carried to an undue extreme, and he might unquestionably have accomplished more had he been able to co-operate with others and to accept and use freely the best work of contemporaries in his own field.

" They were Chinese, not Manchus, and their leaders were all from the extreme south.

The extreme care with which some of the best explorers have performed their tasks is illustrated by the remarkable achievement of the late Dr. Junker along the Mobangi River.

The toleration of Nonconformists was far from pleasing extreme Anglicans, and the influence of this party at the beginning of the eighteenth century menaced the liberty of Dissenters.

Between the extreme views which discard the miraculous altogether, and the old orthodoxy, there are many gradations of belief.

It is possible that the indignation which was felt in Europe and was most loudly expressed in France may prevent the repetition of such extreme measures, but almost anything may happen in a country where the Church is so powerful and so bigoted, and the politicians so corrupt.

"We're supposed to divide the shelf up equally," announced Bengal Virden, who had begun to look upon Miss Peckhamthat was her namewith extreme disapproval from the moment of their introduction.

There was indeed no good reason why General Lee should feel any extreme solicitude for the safety of his army, which, after all its losses, still numbered more than fifty thousand troops; and, with that force of veteran combatants, experience told him, he could count upon holding at bay almost any force which the enemy could bring against him.

And though thou beest now peradventure in extreme want, it may be 'tis for thy further good, to try thy patience, as it did Job's, and exercise thee in this life: trust in God, and rely upon him, and thou shalt be crowned in the end.

At Aden in Arabia they are penned in all day long with that other extreme of heat, and keep their markets in the night.

3. Fear, sorrow, anguish of mind, extreme tortures and horror of conscience, fearful dreams, conceits, visions, &c. Prognostics; Blasphemy, violent death, Subs.

And that was the fourth sect, the Quakers; who were but the Ranters turned from horrid profaneness and blasphemy to a life of extreme austerity on the other side.

How much honester would it be to say, that extreme cases are 'ipso nomine' not generalizable, therefore not the subjects of a law, which is the conclusion 'per genus singuli in genere inclusi'.

Every extreme case must be judged by and for itself under all the peculiar circumstances.

The rule applies till an extreme case occurs; and how can this be proved?

It was the mirth of a beaten woman, of a woman who has known the last extreme of shame and misery and has learned to laugh at it.

We have constantly hoped that the nations of Europe, whilst desolated by foreign wars or convulsed by intestine divisions, would have left the United States to enjoy that peace and tranquillity to which the impartial conduct of our Government has entitled us, and it is now with extreme regret we find the measures of the French Republic tending to endanger a situation so desirable and interesting to our country.

One of these he measured, and though he knew that "stretch" of eighteen feet must be somehow wrong, he was at a complete loss to understand why he found no signs on the snow between the extreme points.

It was a fine, sincere way of doing things; but why the subject of marriage should be made an occasion for archness, for sly looks, forin extreme casesnudgings, passes my comprehension.

The extreme end, called the button, is all it has until three years old; after that age a link is added every year.

Do we say   play   or  extreme