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Jess was clinging to her brother's hand as he stood by the wheel, and Loomis had already clambered in beside her. "Please come, Marshall," pleaded Jessie; but he shook his head. "I must be at camp this evening, sister mine. We go to stables in an hour. You will come back, Loomis?" "As soon as I've seen " and a significant nod supplied the ellipsis.

His moral life is one vast anacoluthon in which the final term is left out that might have given sense to the whole, one vast ellipsis in which custom seems to bridge the chasm left between ideas. He denies the values of sense because they tempt to truancies from mechanical activity; the values of reason he necessarily ignores because they lie beyond his scope.

The religion of the Germans and other northern tribes was more spiritual than that of southern nations, when both were Pagan. And after the introduction of Christianity, the Germans were disinclined to the image-worship of the Papists. X. Auspicia sortesque. Ut qui maxime, sc. observant. Ellipsis supplied by repeating observant==to the greatest extent, none more. Simplex. Sine Romana arte, cf.

Thus modestly, religiously, and sincerely spoke a statesman, who felt that he had accomplished a great work, and that he had indeed brought the commonwealth through the tempest at last. The republic had secured the India trade. On this point the negotiators had taken refuge in that most useful figure of speech for hard-pressed diplomatists and law-makers the ellipsis.

Clarke insists as the accident particularly liable to be induced by any continuous, i.e., non-intermitting, system of education. For non-medical readers it is important to develop the ellipsis and explain the facts upon which, if anywhere, this theory is based.

Thus modestly, religiously, and sincerely spoke a statesman, who felt that he had accomplished a great work, and that he had indeed brought the commonwealth through the tempest at last. The republic had secured the India trade. On this point the negotiators had taken refuge in that most useful figure of speech for hard-pressed diplomatists and law-makers the ellipsis.

The letters 's' and 'v' they never could pronounce. The latter became invariably 'w', and the former mocked all their efforts, which in the instance of Baneelon has been noticed; and a more unfortunate defect in learning our language could not easily be pointed out. They use the ellipsis in speaking very freely; always omitting as many words as they possibly can, consistent with being understood.

His. 4, 15; Suet. Calig. 44. Ni fuissent. Cf. Ni, 4, note. The ellipsis may be supplied thus: he meditated an invasion of Brit. and would have invaded it, had he not been velox ingenio, etc. But in idiomatic Eng. ni==but. Of course fuisset is to be supplied with velox ingenio and mobilis poenitentiae. Al. poenitentia. Gr. 211. Lit. of repentance easy to be moved. Render: fickle of purpose.

"No, but a closed curve." "Which is called " "An ellipsis. Instead of being lost in the interplanetary spaces it is possible that the projectile will describe an elliptical orbit round the moon." "Really!" "And that it will become its satellite." "Moon of the moon," exclaimed Michel Ardan. "Only I must tell you, my worthy friend, that we are none the less lost men on that account!"

Thus modestly, religiously, and sincerely spoke a statesman, who felt that he had accomplished a great work, and that he had indeed brought the commonwealth through the tempest at last. The republic had secured the India trade. On this point the negotiators had taken refuge in that most useful figure of speech for hard-pressed diplomatists and law-makers the ellipsis.