Which preposition to use with circulations
It has now a larger circulation than ever | | beforethe largest circulation of any political paper ever | | printed, and is now so firmly established it can not by any | | possible means fail.
In August he received a visit from Mr. Hobhouse, and on this occasion drew up the remarkable document afterwards given to Mr. M. G. Lewis for circulation in England, which appeared in the Academy of October 9th, 1869.
The paper has a large circulation among the thinking people of the country, and exercises a wide influence.
The digestion is more complete, absorption becomes more rapid, the peristaltic movements of the bowels are promoted, and the circulation through the liver is more vigorous.
On Friday, however, reports were already in circulation to the effect that M. Fasquelle (M. Zola's French publisher) had come to London for the purpose of escorting him home.
In law and honesty the notes of the bank in circulation at the expiration of its charter should have been called in by public advertisement, paid up as presented, and, together with those on hand, canceled and destroyed.
It is now well to study the circulation as a whole, tracing the course of the blood from a certain point until it returns to the same point.
A few Arabic Bibles and Hebrew New Testaments were also placed at my disposal for circulation by the Societies.
"Innumerable reports are in circulation about the capture of spies and the prevention of plots against persons and buildings.
I should not have given it a circulation for the gratification of all the small wits at the great and little houses, where no treat is so agreeable as to find a man laughing at his friend.
Why, Sir, a Water impregnated to a Circulation with prima Materia; upon my Honour, Sir, the strongest I ever drank of. Doct.
The nerve cells become more sensitive to stimuli, more sugar is poured into the blood from the liver, more red blood corpuscles are squeezed into the circulation from the blood lakes of the liver and spleen.
It has now a larger circulation than ever | | beforethe largest circulation of any political paper ever | | printed, and is now so firmly established it can not by any | | possible means fail.
But when medicinally used, it excites a reaction on the surface equivalent to a stimulating effect; as in some cases of fever, when the body has been sponged with cold water, it excites, by reaction, increased circulation on the skin.
If I had remained within their reach, I might have shared the fate of Wirz and other victims of calumnies which, once put in circulation during the war, their official authors dared not retract at its close.
The loss of thirty per cent of its circulation within the past month has brought deep depression upon The Sun.
It is not true, that he learns for the first time, from that anonymous letter (so vulgar, that we could almost suspect him of having written it himself) what charges were in circulation against him.
Towards the end of the T'ang period the government began to issue deposit certificates of its own: the merchant deposited his copper money with a government agency, receiving in exchange a certificate which he could put into circulation like money.
BIDPAÏ, or PILPAÏ, the presumed author of a collection of Hindu fables of ancient date, in extensive circulation over the East, and widely translated.
Something like this we may picture the multiplying tendency of the Originating Mind, and consequently the longer the circulation between it and the individual mind goes on the stronger the latter becomes; and this process growing habitual becomes at last automatic, thus producing an endless flow of Life continually expanding in intelligence, love, power and joy.
Has the Largest Circulation amongst Gardeners and the best class of Amateurs.
It was quite evident that his speech was a written oneprobably a printed harangue issued to him and his compeers for circulation throughout the country.
If the situation created by the War has transformed also the English circulation into unconvertible paper money, this is merely a passing fact.
Shall we cab it or walk?" "I think a sharp walk would rouse our circulation after sitting huddled up in the carriage for so long," I answered.
These sentiments look beautifully as class mottoes on summer graduation programmes, but some of them, apparently, disappear from circulation before cold weather sets in.