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

...Brackett in 19th Report Mass. Board of Health, 272; Prof. At water in Pol. Sci. Quarterly II, 553. - (x) Cheaper than butter and serves purpose equally well - (y) Resists rancidity longer. - (3) Adulteration does not apply. - (x) Butter and cheese adulterated. - (4) Deception guarded against by law requiring stamp. - (5) That one valuable product resembles another no ground for suppressing either. - (b) "A right of property in an article involves the right to sell or dispose of it, as well as use and enjoy it:" Bartemeyer v. Iowa, 18 Wall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 1/14/1895 | See Source »

...game with '95 was of an entirely different stamp. Only two of the men who played on the 'varsity in the first contest played again, and it was practically the second eleven. The two elevens were evenly matched, and not until the last part of the game did the 'varsity score. Whittemore and Jackson broke the line at almost every point, and the senior line held the 'varsity's advances well in check. Doucette was very strong at centre, while F. Shaw was slow and snapped the ball back poorly. The 'varsity had little or no interference...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Football. | 10/25/1894 | See Source »

Purchasers of tickets are reminded that every Yard or Memorial ticket given out by them must bear their signatures, preferably on the face of the card, unless the ticket bears the stamp of the chairman of the Class Day Committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Class Day Notice. | 6/13/1894 | See Source »

...should not have had the beauty of expression, unsurpassable for effectiveness and charm, which is reached in Shakespeare's best passages. The turn for style is perceptible all through English poetry, proving, to my mind, the genuine poetical gift of the race; this turn imparts to our poetry a stamp of high distinction, and sometimes it doubles the force of a poet not by nature of the very highest order, such as Gray, and raises him to a rank beyond what his natural richness and power seem to promise. Goethe, with his fine critical perception, saw clearly enough both...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Passages from Matthew Arnold. | 4/13/1894 | See Source »

...natural magic I am speaking of, is sure, nowadays, if it appears in the productions of the Celt's, or of the English, or of the French, to appear in the productions of the Germans also, or in the productions of the Italians; but there will be a stamp of perfectness and inimitableness about it in the literatures where it is native, which it will not have in the literatures where it not native. A rough-and-ready critic easily credits the Germans with the Celtic fineness of tact, the Celtic nearness to Nature and her secret...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/13/1894 | See Source »

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