| Jonathan Swift - 1801 - 498 páginas
...It contains nothing to provoke them by the least scurrility upon their persons or their functions. It celebrates the Church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If the... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1801 - 488 páginas
...It contains nothing to provoke them by the least scurrility upon their persons or their functions. It celebrates the Church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If the... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1803 - 346 páginas
...of completing bis hundredth year. N. the least scurrility upon their persons or their fane-' tions. It celebrates the Church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If the... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1805 - 350 páginas
...things compared.." The vice of covetousness is what enters deepest into the soul of any other." " He celebrates the church of England as the most perfect of all others." Both these modes of expression are faulty r we should not sajy " The best of any man," or, " The best... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1809 - 330 páginas
...things compared. " The vice of covetousness is what enters deepest into the soul of any other." " He celebrates the church of England as the most perfect of all others." Both these modes of expression are faulty : we should not say, " The best of any man," or, " The best... | |
| Jonathan Swift, William Wotton - 1812 - 250 páginas
...It contains nothing to provoke them by the least scurrility upon their persons or their functions. It celebrates the Church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine ; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If... | |
| Jonathan Swift, Walter Scott - 1814 - 442 páginas
...It contains nothing to provoke them, by the least scurrility upon their persons or their functions. It celebrates the church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine ; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If... | |
| Jonathan Swift, Walter Scott - 1814 - 446 páginas
...It contains nothing to provoke them, by the least scurrility upon their persons or their functions. It celebrates the church of England, as the most perfect of all others, in discipline and doctrine ; it advances no opinion they reject, nor condemns any they receive. If... | |
| Alexander Jamieson - 1826 - 320 páginas
...syntax, implies a thing different from itself ; as it " celehrates the Church of England as the moat perfect of all others."* Properly, either — " as...— or, ,• as the most perfect of all churches." 2. On this principle, Milton falls into an impropriety in these words : — • ~ • - - - - Adam,... | |
| Lindley Murray - 1834 - 366 páginas
...things compared. " The vice of covetousness is what enters deepest into the soul of any other." " He celebrates the church of England as the most perfect of all others." Both these modes of expression are faulty : we should not say, " The best of any man," or, " The best... | |
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