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Page "Julius Caesar Scaliger" ¶ 19
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Exercitationes and are
The Exercitationes in Baronium are but a fragment of the massive criticism which he contemplated ; it failed in presenting the uncritical character of Baronius's history, and had only a moderate success, even among Protestants.
His chief works are: Exercitationes Plautinae ( 1842 ), one of the most masterly productions on the language of Plautus ; Analecta Plautina, printed in Philologus ( 1847 ); Plauti Comoediae ( Vols.

Exercitationes and same
" This is the appears to be the same bdellium referred to by Damocritus, a medical writer, who was quoted by Saracenus in his Scholia in Dioscoridis, and the same bdellium referred to by Galen, as quoted by Salmasius in his Plinianae Exercitationes.

Exercitationes and they
The Exercitationes excited much attention, though they contain little or nothing beyond what others had already advanced against Aristotle.

Exercitationes and Scaliger
His Exercitationes upon the De subtilitate of Cardan ( 1551 ) is the book by which Scaliger is best known as a philosopher.

Exercitationes and .
His earliest mathematical work was the Exercitationes ( Mathematical Exercises ), published in 1724 with the help of Goldbach.
In 1556 he printed his Dialogue on the De plantis attributed to Aristotle, and in 1557 his Exercitationes on Jerome Cardan's, De subtilitate.
In 1624 he printed the first part of his Exercitationes paradoxicae adversus Aristoteleos.
This new edition of what was essentially Rahn's work, by Pell, included a great deal of additional material on number theory, amounting to a reply to the 1657 book Exercitationes mathematicae by Frans van Schooten.
Interpretum ( 1709 ); notes on Thomas Magister ( 1698 ); Exercitationes Philologicae ad loca nonnulla Novi Foederis ( 1700 ); Animadversiones ad Scriptores quosdam Graecos ( 1715 ); and two small treatises on Accents and Greek Syntax.
On the death, in 1614, of Isaac Casaubon, with whom he had previously corresponded about the Exercitationes ad Baronii Annales ( against Baronius ), Montagu was directed by the king to publish that work.
A similar tone of extreme depreciation of the Masoretic Hebrew text, colored by polemical bias against Protestantism, affects his major work, the posthumous Exercitationes biblicae de hebraeici graecique textus sinceritate ( 1660 ), in which, following in the footsteps of Cappellus, he brought arguments against the then current theory of the absolute integrity of the Hebrew text and the antiquity of the vowel points.
* Exercitationes musicae duae.

are and renowned
The ancient population centers such as Chaco Canyon ( outside Crownpoint, New Mexico ), Mesa Verde ( near Cortez, Colorado ), and Bandelier National Monument ( near Los Alamos, New Mexico ) for which the Ancestral Pueblo peoples are renowned, consisted of apartment-like complexes and structures made from stone, adobe mud, and other local material, or were carved into the sides of canyon walls.
Among the more renowned of such works are the writings of Primo Levi, one of many personal accounts of the Shoah.
The four sculptural groups at the base of the Arc are The Triumph of 1810 ( Cortot ), Resistance and Peace ( both by Antoine Étex ) and the most renowned of them all, Departure of the Volunteers of 1792 commonly called La Marseillaise ( François Rude ).
Some of these places are modern well-equipped hotels and spas ; the mineral waters of Afyon are renowned for their healing qualities.
Black Forest clockmakers are renowned for their precision clocks.
While Plains and Plateau tribes are renowned for their beaded horse trappings, Subarctic tribes such as the Dene bead lavish floral dog blankets.
This trade has become renowned as one of the most lopsided in baseball history, including a mention by Susan Sarandon in her opening soliloquy in the 1988 film Bull Durham: " Bad trades are a part of baseball.
Particularly renowned are the architectural works of Antoni Gaudí and Lluís Domènech i Montaner, which have been designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
The whole, however, may be judged from this fragment: " We Irish, though dwelling at the far ends of the earth, are all disciples of St. Peter and St. Paul ... we are bound to the Chair of Peter, and although Rome is great and renowned, through that Chair alone is she looked on as great and illustrious among us ... On account of the two Apostles of Christ, you pope are almost celestial, and Rome is the head of the whole world, and of the Churches ".
Included among these are its nationally renowned deep-dish pizza, this style is said to have originated at Pizzeria Uno.
Kleobis and Biton, two brothers renowned for their strength, are modeled in two of the earliest known athletic statues at Delphi.
The domain Archaea contains renowned examples, but extremophiles are present in numerous and diverse genetic lineages of both bacteria and archaeans.
The spotted hyena is renowned for its strong bite proportional to its size, but a number of other animals ( including the Tasmanian devil ) are proportionately stronger .< ref >
Islands like that of Tinos are renowned for possessing such " miraculous " icons, and are visited every year by thousands of pilgrims.
The films are renowned for a number of features, including the musical accompaniment, with the theme songs to the films having picked up Academy Award nominations on several occasions.
They have, by the help of Divine Providence, overcome all obstacles, and have made themselves free ... I know not by what misfortune, we are fallen into the error of those, who poised the Emperor Titus to make room for Domitian, who made away Augustus that they might have Tiberius, and changed Claudius for Nero ... whereas the people of England are now renowned, all over the world, for their great virtue and discipline ; and yet suffer an idiot, without courage, without sense, nay, without ambition, to have dominion in a country of liberty.
A number of pontifs are renowned for their urban planning in the city of Rome, but Alexander VII ’ s numerous urban interventions were not only diverse in scope and scale but demonstrated a consistent planning and architectural vision that the glorification and embellishment of the city, ancient and modern, sacred and secular, should be governed by order and decorum.
Pipes can range from the very simple machine-made briar pipe to highly-prized handmade and artful implements created by renowned pipemakers which are often very expensive collector's items.
They are to be renowned magistrates and prosecutors, university professors, public officials or lawyers, all of them jurists with recognized competence or standing and more than 15 years of professional experience.
Distinguished among Stockholm's many theatres are the Royal Dramatic Theatre ( Dramaten ), one of Europe's most renowned theatres, and the Royal Swedish Opera, inaugurated in 1773.

are and for
this is not so, for education offers all kinds of dividends, including how to pull the wool over a husband's eyes while you are having an affair with his wife.
If it were not for an old professor who made me read the classics I would have been stymied on what to do, and now I understand why they are classics ; ;
but four Eromonga women are more than a match for the strongest male that ever lived.
However, in recent decades, for what doubtless are multiple reasons, an unannounced but nonetheless readily observable shift has occurred in both facets of national activity.
Of greater importance, however, is the content of those programs, which have had and are having enormous consequences for the American people.
I have just asked these questions in the Pentagon, in the White House, in offices of key scientists across the country and aboard the submarines that prowl for months underwater, with neat rows of green launch tubes which contain Polaris missiles and which are affectionately known as `` Sherwood Forest ''.
Now we must become vague, for we are approaching one of the nation's most guarded secrets.
They are huge areas which have been swept by winds for so many centuries that there is no soil left, but only deep bare ridges fifty or sixty yards apart with ravines between them thirty or forty feet deep and the only thing that moves is a scuttling layer of sand.
Others are confined to vast reservations, and not only does the Australian government justifiably not wish them to be viewed as exhibits in a zoo, but on their reservations they are extremely fugitive, shunning camps, coming together only for corroborees at which their strange culture comes to its highest pitch -- which is very low indeed.
It seems that for Persia, and especially for this city, there are only two times: the glorious past and the corrupt, depressing, sterile present.
Often, too, the social institutions are housed in these pavilions and palaces and bridges, for these great structures are not simply `` historical monuments '' ; ;
In Persia, where practically speaking there are no museums or libraries or, for that matter, hardly any books, the twins run free.
These songs ( practically all Persian music, for that matter ) are limited to a range of two octaves.
We are desperately in the need of such invention, for man is still very much at the mercy of man.
This almost trivial example is nevertheless suggestive, for there are some elements in common between the antique fear that the days would get shorter and shorter and our present fear of war.
I think that we are here also talking of the kind of fear that a young boy has for a group of boys who are approaching at night along the streets of a large city.
Within this notion clarity is possible, but for us who are neither Greek nor Jansenist there is not such clarity.
It is therefore not surprising that they resist the lure of marriage and the trap of domesticity, for like cats they are determined not to tame their sexual energy.
They are full of contempt for the institution of matrimony.
The women who come to West Venice, having forsaken radicalism, are interested in living only for the moment, in being constantly on the move.
Among the recipients of the Nobel Prize for Literature more than half are practically unknown to readers of English.

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