Search Details

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

...laid in our editorial, that the seniors would have no further chance to win the football championship. Our encouragement was in the nature of a last expression of good will to one part of the senior class, and as such need scarcely be grudged to them by those whose college career is happily for them less near its close...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/5/1895 | See Source »

...whose turn it is to go to the Sailor Mission tomorrow morning will please be in the square at 9 o'clock sharp. There will be a short choir practice in Holden Chapel this evening at 6.45, at which all the volunteers for this mission should be present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sailor Mission Notice. | 11/2/1895 | See Source »

...belt of irregular gravel hills, extending about twenty miles from near Narragansett Pier to Watch Hill, averaging a mile in breadth, and fifty to a hundred feet in local relief. On the northern side, the moraine blocks the streams that descend from the interior, thus forming lakes and swamps, whose united overflow to the west creates Pawcatuck river. On the southern side, the moraine is fronted by a plain of sand and gravel, spread out by the wash of ice-water from the margin of the glacial sheet. This plain slopes to the sea-shore, where a number of lagoons...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 11/2/1895 | See Source »

Owing to the failure of the Princeton management to send on all the tickets ordered some few applications from undergraduates have not been filled. The extra tickets from Princeton are expected today and if the applicants whose tickets have not arrived will call at the graduate manager's office between 12 and 2 today they will probably be able to get them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton Tickets. | 11/1/1895 | See Source »

...ideals of Provence were carried north by Elinor. They were spread further through France by the influence of her daughter Marie, who married Count Henry of Champagne and set up her court at Trois. She gave great encouragement to poetry and developed a school in the north of France whose ideals and forms were essentially those of the troubadors of Provence. From Trois came the poet Chretien, whose works, written with much skill, became universally popular. Through them he gave expression in extenso to the social ideals of the court of Marie, where women were the leaders and moulders...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROFESSOR MARSH'S LECTURE. | 10/31/1895 | See Source »

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