Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, Tom 46Devonshire Press, 1914 List of members in each volume. |
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Strona 46
... seems to be in connection with the picture that scientific men draw for us of the Physical Universe round about us . In that way I venture to hope that I may be fulfilling the object of a Presidential Address to a Society which has for ...
... seems to be in connection with the picture that scientific men draw for us of the Physical Universe round about us . In that way I venture to hope that I may be fulfilling the object of a Presidential Address to a Society which has for ...
Strona 53
... seem strange that we should speak of this state of crowdedness as a vacuum at all , but the point is this , that whereas at the ordinary pressure of the air the particles are so crowded that on the average a particle cannot move more ...
... seem strange that we should speak of this state of crowdedness as a vacuum at all , but the point is this , that whereas at the ordinary pressure of the air the particles are so crowded that on the average a particle cannot move more ...
Strona 60
... seems the saying of the old Greek philosopher , ουδὲν μένει πάντα ῥει . Nothing remains fixed -all things change . Though the experimental researches which have led to this conclusion have been of great difficulty and subtlety , yet ...
... seems the saying of the old Greek philosopher , ουδὲν μένει πάντα ῥει . Nothing remains fixed -all things change . Though the experimental researches which have led to this conclusion have been of great difficulty and subtlety , yet ...
Strona 68
... seems no longer likely to lead to further discovery . His articles of faith gain their validity from the logical , mathe- matical , and experimental checks to which he perpetually seeks to submit the conclusions deduced from them , and ...
... seems no longer likely to lead to further discovery . His articles of faith gain their validity from the logical , mathe- matical , and experimental checks to which he perpetually seeks to submit the conclusions deduced from them , and ...
Strona 78
... seem to have much power of locomotion , but some had climbed over the brass doorstep and were found in the tiled porch . The next morning was milder , and only a few specimens were seen , but on the Friday morning , after a cold and dry ...
... seem to have much power of locomotion , but some had climbed over the brass doorstep and were found in the tiled porch . The next morning was milder , and only a few specimens were seen , but on the Friday morning , after a cold and dry ...
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Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Æthelbald Association Barnstaple Bedford Bere Alston Bishop borough Brandis Corner building Canons of Windsor Castle Champernowne chapel Chapter of Exeter Chittlehampton Church of Exeter Citie Cittie Cockington Cornwall Courtenay Cullompton Cuthred Dartmoor Dartmouth daughter Devonshire Duke Earl Edward engine England estates feet Feud font Francis Gytha held Henry Hiern Hist honour House ibid inches July King Kingskerswell Kittery land London Lord manor married Mary Milton Abbot Miss Moor nest Newcomen Newton Abbot Nicholas Norman north aisle Okehampton parish Parliament Plymouth Plympton portreeve Postbridge present Priory probably Queen Read at Tavistock record rectory Richard Road Robert Cary Royal saints sajenes Saxon Seale shalbe Sir John Somerset stone Tamar Tavistock Abbey Tavy Teignmouth Testa Thomas Thomas Newcomen Torquay Torre Abbey Totnes tower town Urith Vicar Vicarage Vict W. P. Hiern wall wasps West Whitchurch wife
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 382 - Most of the letters have four forms in writing, depending on whether they occur at the beginning, in the middle, or at the end of a word or whether they stand separately.
Strona 4 - The COUNCIL of the CAMDEN SOCIETY desire it to be understood that they are not answerable for any opinions or observations that may appear in the Society's publications; the Editors of the several works being alone responsible for the same.
Strona 59 - In the present state of science, therefore, we have strong reasons for believing that in a molecule, or if not in a molecule, in one of its component atoms, we have something which has existed either from eternity or at least from times anterior to the existing order of nature.
Strona 171 - He thought he saw a Coach-and-Four That stood beside his bed: He looked again, and found it was A Bear without a Head. 'Poor thing,
Strona 25 - That the gentlemen whose names are appended be requested to act as a Committee (with power to add to their number) for the purpose of carrying out the previous resolution and of reporting to an adjourned public meeting to be held during the second week in October next.
Strona 458 - ... petition for a patent in his name, and it is now the generally accepted view that Newcomen's invention was worked under Savery's patent. Probably it was held at the time that the grant to Savery covered all means for raising water by the aid of fire.
Strona 56 - ... after which only a small bubble of air remained unabsorbed, which certainly was not more than -j-^ of the bulk of the phlogisticated air let up into the tube ; so that if there is any part of the phlogisticated air of our atmosphere which differs from the rest and cannot be reduced to nitrous acid, we may safely conclude that it is not more than T^ part of the whole.
Strona 309 - Aged 71 years and yet lived but seven years Which was the space of time he kept a Bachelor's House at Arlington On the Eastern Shore of Virginia.
Strona 134 - Enprented in the exempt monastery of Tauestok in Denshyre. By me Dan Thomas Rychard monke of the sayd Monastery / To the instant desyre of the ryght worshypful Esquyer Mayster Robert Langdon.
Strona 149 - Query, was this the house mentioned in 'Doomsday' as being mortgaged to the Abbey by a citizen of Exeter ? " After the suppression of the Abbey, a chapel was erected within its inclosure, and licensed for the celebration of divine worship, at the request of the noble Lady Dorothy Mountjoy, on the 10th March, 1541-2.—Vid. 'Regist. Veysey,