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Word: full (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

TUTORING.- F. L. Meredith B. S., High School experience. Trigonometry, Geometry, Algebra, all the sciences, including full work in Chemistry and Physics. Call or address, 8 Ellery street...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 12/5/1895 | See Source »

...colleges and academies immediately sprung up, but nobody could afford to send their sons to these institutions; therefore a system of public schools became absolutely necessary and was accepted with eagerness. For teachers, their most eminent men, beginning with General Lee, stepped forward, while even the women did their full share. Partly by aid given them from the North, but more through their own determination and perseverance the South gradually developed for itself a great public school system...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EDUCATION IN THE SOUTH. | 12/4/1895 | See Source »

...play the idea is suggested to Argan, the malade imaginaire, that it would be convenient and, above all, a cheap plan to be made a doctor himself. This idea strikes him as a clever one and he desires to be initiated immediately. Thereupon the ceremony takes place, which is full of mock pompousness from beginning to and. The leading figure is the Praeses, or President of the Faculty, a dignified official who, with a sonorous voice, drawls out the Latin formulas. Two other doctors add their opinions in the same manner, and then, the bachelerius, or doctor-elect, makes reply...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LE MALADE IMAGINAIRE. | 12/4/1895 | See Source »

TUTORING.- F. L. Meredith B. S., High School experience. Trigonometry, Geometry, Algebra, all the sciences, including full work in Chemistry and Physics. Call or address, 8 Ellery street...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 12/4/1895 | See Source »

Moliere therefore resolved to attack the whole medical system from the stage. In this play, Le Malade Imaginaire, he has let loose the full force of his stinging satire, ridiculing to the utmost the ignorant doctors, their rough, crude methods, their bleedings, and purgatives, and above all their quackery and pretensions to knowledge. The great difficulty was to handle so repulsive a subject in such a way as to make it agreeable, and in this, Moliere succeeded to an astonishing degree, without one whit weakening his attack...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRENCH PLAY. | 12/3/1895 | See Source »

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