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Quod, imprisonment, is an old English cant and Gipsy word which Mr Hotten attempts to derive from a college quadrangle; but when we find that the Hindu quaid also means confinement, the probability is that it is to it we owe this singular term. There are many words in which it is evident that the Hindu Gipsy meaning has been shifted from a cognate subject.

In the Training Home fifty Galician girls were being indoctrinated into that most noble of all sciences, the science of home-making, and were gaining practical experience in all the cognate sciences and arts. At the Night Hawk ranch too were all the signs of the new order of things.

So much is true of all art, which therefore requires always its logic, its comprehensive reason insight, foresight, retrospect, in simultaneous action true, most of all, of the literary art, as being of all the arts most closely cognate to the abstract intelligence.

But the prudent man Odysseus did not suffer the change, because from Hermes, i.e. reason, he had received immortality. He went down into Hades, as it were, dissolving and separating the soul from the body, and became a spectator of souls both good and bad. The Stoics define the soul as a cognate spirit, sensible to exhalations. It has its origin from the humid portions of the body.

But, fortunately, a language once developed is not blotted out in toto; it merely outlives its usefulness and is gradually supplanted, its successor retaining many traces of its origin. So, just as Latin, for example, has its living representatives in Italian and the other Romance tongues, the language of Assyria is represented by cognate Semitic languages.

Which is as much as to say that he was of "the religion of all sensible men": which is as much as to say that he did not greatly trouble about such matters. In the cognate matter of patriotism Borrow is superficially more unsound in "Wild Wales."

Sounds of gurgle and strangulation, with other cognate noises, was all Upstill's response. 'Indeed, Mr. Heywood, said Dorothy, 'he was so far from neglecting his duty and allowing me to pass unquestioned, that he insulted me grievously, averring that I consorted with malignant rogues and papists, and worse the which drove me to punish him as thou seest.

What the Facts privately known to Friedrich were, in what manner known; and how, in a more complex crisis than had yet been, Friedrich demeaned himself: upon which latter point, and those cognate to it, readers ought not to be ignorant, if now fallen indifferent on so many other points of the Affair.

The fire kindled is cognate with the fire that kindles; and the love that is in man is like the love that is in God. It is the climax of his nature; it is the fulfilling of all duty; it is the crown and jewelled clasp of all perfection. And so 'abideth faith, hope, love, and the greatest of these is love. III. Lastly, what follows from all this?

I would do it myself, for, as the poet says, "Ah, surely nothing dies but something mourns." A sweet fancy, but not so filling as the cognate reflection "Ha-a-ay!" Somebody calling from the other side of the river; probably some forlorn and shipwreck'd brother, looking for his mates The cognate reflection, namely, that nothing withdraws but it leaves room for a successor.