| 1803 - 376 str.
...with scenes and landskips more beautiful than any that can be found-in the whole compass of nature. There are few words in the English language which...uncircumscribed sense than those of the fancy and the Imagination. I therefore thought it necessary to fix and determine the notion of these two words,... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1804 - 578 str.
...with scenes and landscapes more beautiful than any that can be found in the whole compass of nature. There are few words in the English language which...uncircumscribed sense than those of the fancy and the imagination. I therefore thought it necessary to fix and determine the notion of these two words,... | |
| 1804 - 412 str.
...with scenes and landskips more beautiful than any that can be found in the whole compass of nature. There are few words in the English language which...employed in a more loose and uncircumscribed sense thau those of the ' fancy' and the ' imagination.' I therefore thought it necessary to fix and determine... | |
| Hugh Blair - 1807 - 406 str.
...all the varieties "of picture and vision." The latter part of the sentence is clear and elegant. " There are few words in the English Language which...employed in a more loose and uncircumscribed sense thaij ** those of the Fancy and the Imagination." There are few words— which are employed. It had... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1808 - 542 str.
...discovery, which is, at present, universally acknowledged by all the inquirers into natural philosophy. There are few words in the English language, which...uncircumscribed sense, than those of the fancy and the imagination. I intend to make use of these words in the thread of my following speculations, that... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1808 - 178 str.
...discovery, which is, at present, univer*ally acknowledged by all the inquirers i»to natural philosophy. There are few words in the English language, which are employed in a more loose and unciri uroscribed sense, than those of ihe fancy and the imagination. my following speculations, that... | |
| Hugh Blair - 1808 - 330 str.
...the sentence is clear and elegant. There are few words in the English language, which are emfiloyed in a more loose and uncircumscribed sense than those of the fancy and the imagination. Except when some assertion of consequence is advanced, these little words, it is and... | |
| Hugh Blair - 1811 - 464 str.
...lafter part of the sentence is clear and elegant. " There are few words in the English lan" guage, which are employed in a more loose and " uncircumscribed sense than those of the fancy " and the imagination." " THERE are few words, which are employed." It had been better, if our author here... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1812 - 224 str.
...only to suspend their misery. universally acknowledged by all the inquirers into natural philosophy. There are few words in the English language, which are employed in a more loose and uncircumscrjbed sense, than those of the fancy and the imagination. I intend to make use of these words... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1814 - 308 str.
...present 160 SXERCI»ES. (Strength. universally acknowledged by all the inquirers into natural philosophy. There are few words in the English language, which...uncircumscribed sense, than those of the fancy and the imagination. I intend to make use of these words in the thread of my following speculations, that... | |
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