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4-volume and was
It was reissued as a 4-volume facsimile reprint, edited by W. Schmidt-Biggemann ( Fromann-Holzboog Press, Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt, 1989 – 1990 ).
In 1533 a first hand-written primer appeared, and by 1612 a printed grammar by Jerome Megizer was published, followed by F. Mesgnin-Meninski's 4-volume " Lexicon Turcico-Arabico-Persicum " published in 1680.
His 4-volume autobiography has been called " captivating " and provides significant insight into the musical life of Sweden in which Alfvén was a central figure for well over half a century.
The term was taken from the title of a 4-volume physics textbook by Philipp Lenard in the 1930s.
His 4-volume magnum opus, Birds of the Republic of Panama, was published by the Smithsonian between 1965 and 1984, the last volume appearing posthumously.
Ontario Hydro's Plan to Serve Customers ' Electricity Needs " was a massive 4-volume 1989 study to the year 2014 by Ontario Hydro, the then supplier of electric power for the province of Ontario, Canada.

4-volume and first
He has thus far ( co -) edited 15 volumes of Berlin's writings, as well as the first 2 volumes of a 4-volume edition of Berlin's letters.

4-volume and which
In 1955 – 67 the Society launched the new series with the 4-volume Journals of Captain James Cook, closely followed by other titles which included the monumental Charts & Coastal Views of Captain Cook's Voyages ( 1988 – 92 ).

4-volume and late
As late as 1970, more than 8 million copies of the 4-volume set of Selected Works of Marx and Engels that had already been printed ( both in cloth hardcover and paperback ) remained undistributed in storage warehouses on the grounds that other works “ should not interfere with learning Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung ”.

4-volume and .
* Philip Pickett and the New London Consort issued a 4-volume set of Carmina Burana settings using medieval instrumentation and performance techniques.
In 1989, Ontario Hydro published a 4-volume study, up to the year 2014, under the title " Providing the Balance of Power.
This series has also adapted into a 4-volume manga series.
* Ian C. Ballon ( 1986 ), Internet lawyer and author of several law books, including a 4-volume legal treatise on e-commerce law

work and was
The best antidote for the bitterness and disappointment that poisoned him was hard work.
So simple, in fact, that it might even work -- although Pamela, now, in her new frame of mind, was careful not to pretend too much assurance.
He'd started a fire and put coffee on, and now was busy at the work board of his chuck wagon.
Tom Horn was soon back at work, giving his secret employers their money's worth.
The arrangement I had with him was to work four hours a day.
I quit work at my usual hour as if this day was no different from other days.
Their work was lonely.
With Ramey it was a dusty work shoe that was half-off the Indian's foot that he would always remember.
He was aware of her as a frightfully good-looking American WAC, a second lieutenant assigned to do the paper work, ( regardless of how important she might have thought she was ) in the Command offices, but that was all.
That should do it, he thought, because Miss Langford had said she was going to be strict about school work.
The only drawback now to the plan he'd decided on was that someone else might fail to do his work, too, and the teacher would have that person stay late along with Jack.
Was it supposed, perchance, that A & M ( vocational training, that is ) was quite sufficient for the immigrant class which flooded that part of the New England world in the post-Civil War period, the immigrants having been brought in from Southern Europe, to work in the mills, to make up for the labor shortage caused by migration to the West??
His next major work, completed in 1892, was a long fantastic epic in prose, entitled Hans Alienus, which Professor Book describes as a monument on the grave of his carefree and indolent youth.
Whether in prose or poetry, all of Heidenstam's later work was concerned with Sweden.
But his own work was evolving further.
One evening, while a volley-ball game was being played in the yard among the prisoners remaining there, a simulated melee was staged -- just as the gates were opened to admit other prisoners returning from work.
While convalescing in his Virginia home he wrote a book recording his prison experiences and escape, entitled: They Shall Not Have Me Published originally in ( Helion's ) English by Dutton & Co. of New York, in 1943, the book was received by the press as a work of astonishing literary power and one of the most realistic accounts of World War 2, from the French side.
And I was to go to work on that odd matter.
It was part of Little Jack's work to look after the dogs.
As a result, he was sent to a hospital in Arizona until his health improved enough for him to come back to Washington to work in the Government service.
But again, there was danger that his lungs would suffer in the muggy Washington weather, and he had to return to the dry climate of the West to live and work.

work and imaginary
Much of his earlier work was conceived in terms of a `` pseudo-anthropological '' myth reference, which is concerned with imaginary places and beings described in grandiloquent and travelogue-like language.
* The twelve-volume opus Life by Unspiek, Baron Bodissey is an oft-quoted imaginary work referred to in various novels by Jack Vance.
The Land of Cockaigne ( also Cockaygne, Cokaygne ), was an imaginary land of idleness and luxury, famous in medieval story, and the subject of more than one poem, one of which, an early translation of a 13th-century French work, is given in Ellis's Specimens of Early English Poets.
First published in the 1960s, her work has often depicted futuristic or imaginary worlds alternative to our own in politics, natural environment, gender, religion, sexuality and ethnography.
The idea of the fourth wall was made explicit by philosopher and critic Denis Diderot and spread in 19th-century theatre with the advent of theatrical realism, which extended the idea to the imaginary boundary between any fictional work and its audience.
It is the most prestigious prize in French language literature, given to " the best imaginary prose work of the year ".
His most outstanding work is an illustrated epic of 45 volumes in which he narrates his own imaginary life story.
However, in Weimar Cinema and After, Thomas Elsaesser describes the legacy of Kracauer's work as a " historical imaginary ".
As a result, his approach tends to ' track ' the structure of a work as it unfolds through time before the ear of his imaginary " naive listener ".
and his early work was heavily influenced his teacher. Like Ribera he painted many half-length figures of philosophers, either imaginary portraits of specific figures, or generic types.
Till half way through the seventies the subjects of his imaginary world New Babylon still crowd his work.
* No Love Lost-A lively debate about the nature of democracy in America, in the form of an imaginary dialogue between Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr ; the work is based on their writings.
In his book about the work of Henry Corbin and others concerning the 12th-century Muslim saint Ibn Arabi, he develops the idea of the Green Man / Khidr as the principle mediating between the imaginary realm and the physical world.
Emerson by this time had developed a serious case of hypochondria, using imaginary laryngitis attacks to garner attention away from her work, he was, in the words of his wife, " a man who enjoyed ill health.
Nastasya too at one point in the novel describes a painting of Christ, her own imaginary work that portrays Christ with a child, an image which naturally evokes comparison between the image of the dead Christ.
Finally it may describe an entirely imaginary and non-existing work of art, as though it were factual and existed in reality.
Khnopff accepted this commission but destroyed the work later because the famous soprano Rose Caron was offended by the imaginary portrait of Leonora d ' Este that Khnopff had designed to adorn the cover and in which Caron believed to recognise her own face.
These poems, in turn, were imitated in English by Edmund Spenser in The Faerie Queene, although Spenser's work has been separated from the Matter of France and put in the setting of an imaginary faerie land.
Gosfield has composed a site-specific work for a factory in Germany, collaborated on installations with artist Manuel Ocampo, and created a video for an imaginary orchestra of destroyed instruments.
Performance artist Laurie Anderson praises his work: " The art of audio collage has been reinvented here ... A brilliant sense of imaginary space.
Moreover these equations have real rather than imaginary roots, so in principle can be solved by geometric construction: this because the work all goes on inside a totally real field.
* The twelve-volume opus Life by Unspiek, Baron Bodissey is an oft-quoted imaginary work referred to in various novels by Jack Vance.
A fictional book is an imaginary book that does not itself exist, but is referred to in an actual book, usually a work of fiction.
The couple won a Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album of 1960 for their work as the imaginary pair.

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