| James Kirke Paulding - American fiction - 1849 - 512 pages
...very plain if one could only see it : but like black and white, the edges may be so blended together that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends." So Langley fell asleep, and again dreamed of the little Crop-ear. Precisely at the same moment the... | |
| Geology - 1866 - 470 pages
...corundum ; and in several specimens I possess, the two minerals shade into each other so completely, that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. The above facts were all well examined when my first memoirs appeared on this subject, which accounts for... | |
| American Entomological Society - Electronic journals - 1868 - 480 pages
...both been founded on unique specimens, and though I have seen representatives of each in a series, it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. ANOPLOTRUPES Jekel. The Geofrupes of this subgenus are characterized by a truncation of the second... | |
| American Entomological Society - Electronic journals - 1868 - 496 pages
...both been founded on unique specimens, and though I have seen representatives of each in a series, it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. ANOPLOTRUPES Jekel. The Gentruprs of this subgenus are characterized by a truncation of the second... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1872 - 384 pages
...the worship of the stars, or of the universe.2 Here it easily branches off into Polytheism. Indeed, it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends, for traces of each of the three forms are found in all the others ; the two must be distinguished by... | |
| John Lawrence Smith - Chemistry - 1873 - 408 pages
...corundum ; and in several specimens I possess the two minerals shade into each other so completely that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. The above facts were all well examined when my first memoirs appeared on this subject, which accounts for... | |
| Theodore Parker - Religion - 1876 - 398 pages
...the worship of the stars, or of the universe.2 Here it easily branches off into Polytheism. Indeed, it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends, for traces of each of the three forms are found in all the others ; the two must be distinguished by... | |
| John Lawrence Smith - Chemistry - 1878 - 416 pages
...corundum ; and in several specimens I possess the two minerals shade into each other so completely that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. The above facts were all well examined when my first memoirs appeared on this subject, which accounts for... | |
| John Lawrence Smith - Chemistry - 1884 - 692 pages
...the corundum; and in several specimens I possess the two minerals shade into each other so completely that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. The above facts were all well examined when my first memoirs appeared on this subject, which accounts for... | |
| Christianity - 1888 - 438 pages
...combined with the voluntary, as in breathing, winking, walking, swallowing, and in less manifest cases, so that it is impossible to tell where one begins and the other ends. Thus the passage from sensation to motor reaction through ideational states, through intellection,... | |
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