Hidden fields
Books Books
" Entire, complete. — A thing is entire, by wanting none of its parts ; complete, by wanting none of the appendages that belong to it. A man may have an entire house to himself, and yet not have one complete apartment. "
London Magazine: Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer... - Page 522
1735
Full view - About this book

Moffatt's pupil teachers' course (ed. by T. Page). Candidates, 2nd (-4th) year

Moffatt and Paige - 1879 - 506 pages
...founded on the high opinion we entertain of ourselves ; disdain on the mean opinion we have of others. Entire, complete. A thing is entire by wanting none...parts ; complete by wanting none of the appendages which belong to it. " The man has an entire house to himself, but there is not one complete apartment...
Full view - About this book

Short Essays: Original and Selected, Etc

Short essays - 1885 - 208 pages
...founded on the high opinion we entertain of ourselves ; disdain on the mean opinion we have of others. Entire, complete. A thing is entire by wanting none...parts ; complete by wanting none of the appendages which belong to it. " The man has an entire house to himself, but there is not one complete apartment...
Full view - About this book

The Writer's Handbook, a Guide to the Art of Composition, Embracing a ...

English language - 1888 - 576 pages
...distinguished from each other by their qualities ; they are separated by the distance of time or place. Entire, complete. — A thing is entire by wanting none of its parts ; complete by wanting none of its appendages. A man may be master of an entire house, ' which has not one complete apartment. Equivocal,...
Full view - About this book

Composition and Style

Robert D. Blackman - Authorship - 1908 - 328 pages
...distinguished from each other by their qualities ; they are separated by the distance of time or place. Entire, complete. — A thing is entire by wanting none of its parts ; complete by wanting none of its appendages. A man may be master of an entire house, which has not one complete apartment. Equivocal,...
Full view - About this book

Lectures on Rhetoric

Hugh Blair, Grenville Kleiser - English language - 1911 - 190 pages
...unaccompanied with other advantages, is sufficient to do it. Entire, complete. A thing is entire, by 45 wanting none of its parts ; complete, by wanting none...appendages that belong to it. A man may have an entire house to himself, and yet not have one complete apartment. Tranquillity, peace, calm. Tranquillity...
Full view - About this book

The principles of English grammar; or, No.viii of a new series of school-books

Scottish school-book assoc - 1860 - 136 pages
...improperly. * The enterprise, however laudable the attempt, was found 1feo. Entire, complete — A tiling is entire, by wanting none of its parts; complete,...appendages that belong to it. A man may have an entire house to himself, and jet not have one complete apartment. Surprised, astonished, amazed, confounded....
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF