Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Samuel Thomson" ¶ 18
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Thomson's and own
Andrew Millar, a British publisher, purchased the rights to James Thomson's The Seasons in 1629, and when the copyright term expired, a competing publisher named Robert Taylor began issuing his own reprints of the work.
The strip was taken over by one of DC Thomson's own artists after issue 69 with new strips being drawn by Sam Fair, Charles Gordon and George Drysdale.
Several of Thomson's law-related businesses outside the United States have their own Westlaw sites, and Westlaw's international content is available at www. westlawinternational. com.
Thomson's poet speaks in the first person from direct observation, and his own mood and sentiment color the descriptions of landscape.
Thomson's system was appealing because it allowed each individual to administer his or her own treatment.
Thomson's first road steamers, manufactured in his own small workshop in Leith, were fitted with three wheels, the small single wheel at the front being directly below the steering wheel.
" After the term of the exclusive rights granted under the Statute of Anne expired, Robert Taylor began publishing his own competing publication, which contained Thomson's poem.
" A year later, Jean Boggs proposed that Thomson was influenced by the European Symbolists: " against the dying light and sky the scraggly forms of The Jack Pine are most dramatic, its branches struggling to life but dominated by dark-green, tattered, bat-like forms as if the tree were a symbol – beautiful, oriental, but a symbol nevertheless of Thomson's wish for his own death on this spot.
Imagination fired by Thomson's expedition, Haggard promptly wrote a book of his own, King Solomon's Mines.
Thomson's poet speaks in the first person from direct observation, and his own mood and sentiment color the descriptions of landscape.

Thomson's and description
Hagley Hall was the seat of Thomson's patron the Baron Lyttleton, and the poem's description of a sylvan dale is strikingly reminiscent of the Brandywine Valley.
* Kenji Mizoguchi ( see description of Mizoguchi's long take mastery in David Thomson's Biographical Dictionary of Film )
Thomson's The Seasons ( 1730 ) is poetry of natural description, but they are unlike Pope's notion of the Golden Age pastoral.

Thomson's and legal
Before Thomson's acquisition of West, the CJS competed against the American Jurisprudence legal encyclopedia.

Thomson's and problems
Some philosophers, however, say that Zeno's paradoxes and their variations ( see Thomson's lamp ) remain relevant metaphysical problems.
Since 2009 Thomson's speeches and media releases have often dealt with problems of Australian and global population growth.
Horner was ever vigilant in his reading, as shown by his characteristic return to the Diary for 1821 in a discussion of the Prize Problem, where he reminds readers of an item in ( Thomson's ) Annals of Philosophy for 1817 ; several other problems in the Diary that year were solved by his youngest brother, Joseph.
Whitehouse's inadequate apparatus had to be replaced by Thomson's more sensitive mirror galvanometer but Whitehouse then ruined the cable by delivering massive shocks of 2, 000 volts in an attempt to rectify the problems.

Thomson's and is
It is famous for its exceptional population of lions, leopards and cheetahs, game, and the annual migration of zebra, Thomson's gazelle, and wildebeest to and fro the Serengeti every year from July to October, known as the Great Migration.
The Great Migration is one of the most impressive natural events worldwide, involving some 1, 300, 000 wildebeest, 500, 000 Thomson's gazelles, 97, 000 Topi, 18, 000 elands, and 200, 000 zebras.
The most critical of these was David Thomson's Scott's Men ( 1977 ); in Thomson's view, Scott was not a great man, " at least, not until near the end "; his planning is described as " haphazard " and " flawed ", his leadership characterised by lack of foresight.
One of the most famous episodes in Major League Baseball history, the " Shot Heard ' Round the World " is the name given to Bobby Thomson's walk-off home run that clinched the National League pennant for the Giants over their rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers.
The social structure of the springbok is similar to the Thomson's gazelle.
The cheetah is a carnivore, eating mostly mammals under, including the Thomson's gazelle, the Grant's gazelle, the springbok and the impala.
For example, on the East African plains, its preferred prey is the Thomson's gazelle.
Charles Thomson's painting, Sir Nicholas Serota Makes an Acquisitions Decision, as Charlotte Cripps of The Independent wrote is one of the best known paintings to come out of the Stuckist movement, and as Jane Morris wrote in The Guardian it's a likely " signature piece " for the movement, standing for its opposition to conceptual art.
Several of Stein's writings have been set to music by composers, including Virgil Thomson's operas Four Saints in Three Acts and The Mother of Us All, and James Tenney's setting of Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose as a canon dedicated to Philip Corner, beginning with " a " on an upbeat and continuing so that each repetition shuffles the words, e. g. " a / rose is a rose / is a rose is / a rose is a / rose.
A monument to the explorer Joseph Thomson ( after whom the Thomson's Gazelle is named ), who lived in neighbouring Penpont and Gatelawbridge, can be found close to the school.
The following is adapted from a contemporary account of Thomson's instrument:
Close to Nairobi National Park is also the Kitengela Game Conservation Area populated with buffalo, masai giraffe, black rhino, eland, impala, Grant's and Thomson's gazelle, common and Defassa waterbuck, hippopotamus, warthog, Olive Baboon, monkeys and the attendant carnivores-lion, Spotted Hyena, cheetah, jackals, Bat-eared Fox and smaller carnivores.
Kleist's chief work is a poem in hexameters, Der Frühling ( 1749 ), for which Thomson's Seasons largely supplied ideas.
The zebra is a pioneer grazer and prepares the way for more specialized grazers like blue wildebeests and Thomson's gazelles who depend on shorter and more nutritional grasses.
An area on the Georgian Bay water between Owen Sound and Leith, simply marked with a green buoy, is known by local salmon and trout anglers as " Thomson's Hole ".
Although the Group of Seven was not officially founded until after Thomson's death, his work is sympathetic to that of group members A. Y. Jackson, Frederick Varley, and Arthur Lismer.
Roy MacGregor's novel Shorelines ( reissued in 2002 as Canoe Lake ) is a fictional interpretation of Thomson's death.

Thomson's and given
The name of Wedderburn was given to the area by John Turnbull Thomson, and is one of the names in his infamous " Thomson's Barnyard ", wedder being Northumbrian dialect form of the word wether, meaning a castrated sheep.

Thomson's and New
It bought the former London & Glasgow Engineering & Iron Shipbuilding Co's Middleton and Govan New shipyards in Govan and Mackie & Thomson's Govan Old yard, which had been owned by William Beardmore and Company.
His last home run of 1951 came on October 2 against the New York Giants, as the Dodgers tied the 3-game NL playoff series at a game each with a 10-0 win ; New York would take the pennant the next day on Bobby Thomson's " Shot Heard ' Round the World ".
Harwell broadcast for the Dodgers through, the New York Giants from – ( including his call of Bobby Thomson's " shot heard ' round the world " in the third and deciding game of the 1951 National League tie-breaker series, simulcast nationally on NBC television ), and the Baltimore Orioles from –.
Branca had been aware of the rumors and was skeptical of Thomson's denial, but later told The New York Times, " I didn't want to diminish a legendary moment in baseball.
In 1981, a New York concert version was performed for Thomson's eighty-fifth birthday celebration.
Thomson's translation of the entire Greek Bible, excluding the Apocrypha, was published in one thousand sets of four volumes each, the fourth volume being Thomson's translation of the New Testament in that same year.
Thomson's translation of the New Covenant / Testament is the first American translation of the New Covenant.
In, when Dodger manager Chuck Dressen needed a reliever to face the New York Giants ' Bobby Thomson in the ninth inning of the decisive third game of the National League pennant playoff, Sukeforth, coaching in the Dodger bullpen, passed over Carl Erskine and sent in Ralph Branca, who gave up Thomson's " shot heard ' round the world ".
With Russ Hodges ' famous radio call limited to the Giants ' network, McLendon's call is how most Americans heard the NL clincher, including Giant Bobby Thomson's ninth-inning three-run homer into the left-field stands to win it for New York.
He commissioned many works, including Aaron Copland's Lincoln Portrait, Jerome Kern's Portrait of Mark Twain, William Schuman's New England Triptych, Paul Creston's Frontiers, Ferde Grofé's Hudson River Suite, Virgil Thomson's musical portraits of Fiorello La Guardia and Dorothy Thompson, Alan Hovhaness's Floating World, and Ezra Laderman's Magic Prison.
It is believed that he tried to adopt the Jeff Thomson's slingy bowling style, and later Dilley's style was used by Chris Cairns in New Zealand.
On October 3, 1951, Lockman scored the tying run, just ahead of Bobby Thomson, on Thomson's home run that gave the New York Giants the National League championship — baseball's " Shot Heard ' Round the World.

0.320 seconds.