Do we say promise or premise

promise 8838 occurrences

there is not any place Can promise such security as this To Eleonora.

speake, man, if thou canst; looke this way; I promise thee 'tis an honest man & a true Englishman that speakes to thee.

Mr. Crowe assisted him in compiling the notes; Lowth offered to ordain him, with the promise of making some provision for him in the church; and one, whose humanity and candour are among the chief ornaments of the bench on which Lowth then sate, Doctor Bathurst, soothed him by those benevolent offices which he delights to extend to the neglected and the oppressed.

Temptation to enter into orders in our church was thrice offered him, and as often rejected; once in the shape of a general promise of patronage from Dr. Drummond, Archbishop of York; next, of a small living in Dorsetshire, in the gift of Mr. John Pitt: and the third time, of a much more valuable benefice, which was at the disposal of Dr. Thomas, Bishop of Winchester.

There is little promise in the specimens he gives of his earlier attempts.

Whoever will be at the trouble of comparing him with Pindar, will see how far he is from fulfilling this promise.

I owe you frankness, however, and having promised it I acquit myself of the promise.

You told me that she was at home, and, add to the neighborhood, the unmeasured longing I have to make her acquaintance, you will not be surprised at the promise I have just made you.

"I'll promise not to run away with you," said the captain, bluntly.

If a man wishes to buy some commodity from another but has not the money to pay for it, he may secure what he wants by giving his written promise to pay at some future time.

This written promise, or note, the seller prefers to an oral promise for several reasons, only two of which need be mentioned here: first, because it is prima facie evidence of the debt; and, second, because it may be more easily transferred or handed over to some one else.

This written promise, or note, the seller prefers to an oral promise for several reasons, only two of which need be mentioned here: first, because it is prima facie evidence of the debt; and, second, because it may be more easily transferred or handed over to some one else.

A note is an unconditional promise in writing, to pay a definite sum of money at a certain time to a specified person.

The draft thereby becomes his unconditional promise, and he becomes the principal debtor, occupying the position of a maker of a note.

March 5, 1890, I promise to pay John Smith one hundred dollars, if he is then living.

2. On or before March 5, 1890, I promise to pay John Smith one hundred bushels of wheat.

On March 5, 1890, I promise to pay John Smith whatever is then due him.

When he comes of age, I promise to pay John Smith one hundred dollars.

March 5, 1890, I promise to pay one hundred dollars.

6. One year after date, I promise to pay to John Smith one hundred dollars.

One year after date I promise to pay John Smith one hundred dollars.

On the death of his father, I promise to pay John Smith one hundred dollars.

On March 5, 1890, I, William Jones, promise to pay John Smith one hundred dollars.

Like all the hero-gods, he left behind him the well-remembered promise that at some future day he should return to them, and that a race of men should come in time, to gather them into towns and rule them in peace.

We had not forgotten our promise to Lieutenant Foster to put up a "guide-board" of some sort, for his accommodation in following us.

premise 145 occurrences

That the American has lost somewhat in animal resources is incontestable; but Mr. Knox's ever-implied premise, "The animal is the man," from which his Jeremiad derives its plaint, is but a provincial paper-currency, of very local estimation, and can never, like gold and silver, pass by weight in the world's marts of thought.

His line of reasoning was logical, but in my judgment was based on the false premise that the Japanese would carry out their threat to refuse to accept the Treaty and enter the League of Nations unless they obtained a cession of the German rights.

But another class of theologians deduced from this premise, that, as Christ's death was an infinite atonement for the sins of the world, so all men, and consequently all sinners, would be saved.

Now the method which was almost exclusively employed until Bacon's time is commonly called the deductive method; that is, some principle or premise was assumed to be true, and reasoning was made from this assumption.

We must premise that our observations are intended to apply only to those who adhered, from a sincere preference, to one or to the other side.

With a utopian future of global economic prosperity as central to its basic premise as any fundamentalist vision of a perfect past era in harmony with God, believers in the capitalist narrative responded the only way they could.

Unlike the 1960s, when people questioned their authorities in the hope of replacing them (revolution), today's activists are forcing us to re-evaluate the premise underlying top-down authority as an organising principle (renaissance).

The underlying premise is still dependent on the notion of progress.

It is fair, however, to premise, that while the cleverest of Hook's hoaxes were of a victimizing character, a large number were just the reverse, and his admirers affirm, not without some reason, that when he had got a dinner out of a person whom he did not know, by an ingenious lie, admirably supported, he fully paid for it in the amusement he afforded his host and the ringing metal of his wit.

1. I may be permitted to premise at this division of my work, what most historians [Footnote: Thucydides seems to be specially referred to.] have professed at the beginning of their whole undertaking; that I am about to relate the most memorable of all wars that were ever waged: the war which the Carthaginians, under the conduct of Hannibal, maintained with the Roman people.

" I have quoted thus at some length from one of his many polemics to show the absolute and fearless sincerity of the man, mistaken though he may have been in his major premise.

The effort, however, must be made; and it will be best to premise a brief statement of the external conditions of the life.

Arguing with himself from that premise, the conclusion was inevitable: she knew that her husband would return from Nashville at midnight.

The conclusions to be inevitably reached from the premise that Naomi was the woman in the taxicab were none too pleasant.

In the syllogism the judgment asserted in the conclusion is derived from a general rule, the major premise.

Before we speak particularly to each of these points, it may be expedient to premise somewhat concerning the divine providence of the Lord in regard to the rise of Mahometanism.

Again: "I beg leave only to premise this observation, that I absolutely and unequivocally deny the position, that all the letters of the Hebrew alphabet are consonants; and, after the most careful and minute inquiry, give it as my opinion, that of the twenty-two letters of which the Hebrew alphabet consists, five are vowels and seventeen are consonants.

"A disjunctive syllogism is one whose major premise is disjunctive.

I only remember a comparison between the transcendental belief of Christianity in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and the natural triplicity of oxygen, hydrogen, and ozone, with many other analogous triplicities from absolute truth, goodness, and beauty, to the syllogism of the minor premise, the major premise, and the conclusion,a quaint mixture of Hegel and Hoene-Wronski, and utterly useless.

I only remember a comparison between the transcendental belief of Christianity in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and the natural triplicity of oxygen, hydrogen, and ozone, with many other analogous triplicities from absolute truth, goodness, and beauty, to the syllogism of the minor premise, the major premise, and the conclusion,a quaint mixture of Hegel and Hoene-Wronski, and utterly useless.

In order to which, I shall premise, that many more Estates have been acquir'd by little Accomplishments than by extraordinary ones; those Qualities which make the greatest Figure in the Eye of the World, not being always the most useful in themselves, or the most advantageous to their Owners.

If the premise is true that gracefulness means economy of force, then it follows as a logical sequence that a constant practice of graceful deportment must bring with it a reserve and storage of force.

I need only premise further, that the stone itself is a goodly block of metamorphick sandstone, and that the Runes resemble very nearly the ornithichnites or fossil bird-tracks of Dr. Hitchcock, but with less regularity or apparent design than is displayed by those remarkable geological monuments.

Now, for such as would make use of Christ as the way to the Father in the point of justification, those things are requisite; to which we shall only premise this word of caution, That we judge not the want of these requisites a ground to exempt any, that heareth the gospel, from the obligation to believe and rest upon Christ as he is offered in the gospel.

And let me premise that I make use of anecdotes not for the purpose of telling a good story, but solely in the way of illustration.

Do we say   promise   or  premise