United States or Hong Kong ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


Briefly it is this, that nothing real is absolutely simple, that every smallest bit of experience is a multum in parvo plurally related, that each relation is one aspect, character, or function, way of its being taken, or way of its taking something else; and that a bit of reality when actively engaged in one of these relations is not by that very fact engaged in all the other relations simultaneously.

But we can continue to hold the verbal or nominal nature of inikwihl in abeyance long before we reach the -'i or -ma. We can pluralize it: inikw-ihl-'minih; it is still either "fires in the house" or "burn plurally in the house." We can diminutivize this plural: inikw-ihl-'minih-'is, "little fires in the house" or "burn plurally and slightly in the house."

Though in this term the apostle speaks of him that ruleth, yet he speaks not of every one that ruleth. For, 1. He speaks singularly, he that ruleth, as of one kind of ruling officer; not plurally, they that rule, as if he had indefinitely or universally meant all the ruling officers in the church. 2.

"As though our Ruth couldn't have all she wants if she wants them." "I really wish you would not speak plurally of them, Ann," cried Ruth, laughing. "You will make me feel like the Queen of the Amazons. They say she keeps a masculine harem like a bey, or a sultan, or something of that kind." "Be serious," rejoined Helen. "I mean what I say. Jennie's great day has arrived.

Perhaps it would not have been decorous; they do not let ladies, either singly or plurally, into the garden of the convent, which is memorable among many other facts as being the retreat of Mr.

"I well remember your beautiful dancing," said the captain. "Will you give me some waltzes?" "I don't give them plurally," said Patty, smiling at him. "I'll give you one, perhaps; a half one, anyway." "Not enough!" said Captain Sayre, decidedly. "I must have more than that, by fair means or otherwise. Where is your card?" "I haven't any yet; won't it be time enough to get one after supper?"