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Word: consign (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...wealth of fields and forests. Behind them rests even the skill, the enterprise and ingenuity of our people. If property is safe, if the nation is safe, if life is safe, then those bonds are safe. And if those bonds are not safe, then a man had as well consign his gold to the sea and his existence to oblivion, for the world...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NATION'S STRENGTH | 6/5/1917 | See Source »

Those men who now are preparing for their departure to fight the enemy which desolates France, keep with them the responsibility of those non-combattants who at home depend on them for existence. In no surer way may a soldier consign his property to his dependents than in Government bonds. In so doing he insures them against the dangers of illy-invested capital and the waste of non-productive capital. In so doing he also in a way lays odds on his own strength of heart and arm and the strength of those hundreds of thousands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NATION'S STRENGTH | 6/5/1917 | See Source »

...warring nations has been that there are always enough chaplains. Their further experience has been that chaplains consume about as much canned marmalade and bully beef as those whose tastes are presumably more bloodthirsty. In a pinch, when face to face with necessity, a man can pray, or consign his soul to eternity without the aid of a trained intermediary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN OBJECTION OVERRULED | 6/2/1917 | See Source »

Isolated bits of knowledge constitute our fuel for thought, but the product of our thinking capacity will have little individual worth unless we learn to generalize our specific experiences and consign to memory only the fundamental and basic principles essential to stimulate original enterprise. So long as we only speak what we have heard and write what we have read our mental efficiency is zero. Although we probably will always applaud, if not envy, the person having a memory of uncommon accuracy, yet, as Professor Neilson suggests, "the modern idea is that memory is not a store-house in which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE CURSE OF MEMORY" | 12/7/1916 | See Source »

With these facts placed before them, we hope that the University authorities will grant us the two days that mean four days of vacation to us and will not consign us to four useless days among the mid-winter delights of Cambridge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VACATION COMPLAINT | 10/8/1913 | See Source »

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