14 Verbs to Use for the Word monograph

The Child Study Society has published a little monograph on the subject giving the experience of different teachers and specimens of the writing.

And does it not seem hard to you, That when the sky is clear and blue, And I should like so much to play, I have to go to bed by day?" Mr. Hopkinson Smith has written a witty little monograph on this relation of parents and children.

Meanwhile, in anticipation of the final triumph of the armies of the Allied and Associated Powers, the President, in the spring of 1917, directed the organization, under the Department of State, of a body of experts to collect data and prepare monographs, charts, and maps, covering all historical, territorial, economic, and legal subjects which would probably arise in the negotiation of a treaty of peace.

The Shih Chi also, like later historical works, contains many monographs dealing with particular fields of knowledge, such as astronomy, the calendar, music, economics, official dress at court, and much else.

"] [Footnote 2: An excellent monograph upon the subject of Extradition, by Hon.

[I invented this monograph for the purpose of inducing Petherton to reload.]

But there is the less occasion to lament Lord Rowton's tardiness, because we already possess Mr. Froude's admirable monograph on Lord Beaconsfield in the series of The Queen's Prime Ministers, and an extremely clear-sighted account of his relations with the Crown in Mr. Reginald Brett's Yoke of Empire.

But simultaneously with its second edition (1878) there appeared two monographs, which constituted the embryo of the new school, supplementing the anthropological studies of Lombroso with conclusions and systematizations from the point of view of sociology and law.

Let us only succeed in delineating in brief monograph the outlines of a natural history of the British Laurel,Laurea nobilis, sempervirens, florida,and in posting here and there, as we go, a few landmarks that shall facilitate the surveys of investigators yet unborn, and this our modest enterprise shall be happily fulfilled.

He went home to the brown velvety, leathery study in his Welbeck Street flat to write out his notes, or read some monograph on inoculation; or he dined with a colleague and talked to him about bacteria.

By the way, have you seen Mr. Lea's splendid monograph (with colored plates) of Unios, in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society?" "Are we to have a narrative of the two expeditions in print?

And if any one would know how to study the natural history of a place, and how to write it, let him readand if he has read its delightful pages in youth, read once againthat hitherto unrivalled little monograph, White's "Natural History of Selborne;" and let him then try, by the light of improved science, to do for any district where he may be stationed, what White did for Selborne nearly one hundred years ago.

[Footnote 33: For these and other data I am indebted to Professor E.P. Puckett of Central College, Fayette, Mo., who has permitted me to use his monograph, "Free Negroes in Louisiana," in manuscript.

For the founding of the several colonies, their charters, etc., the student may profitably consult the learned monographs in Winsor's Narrative and Critical History of America, 8 vols.

14 Verbs to Use for the Word  monograph