How To Use xxiv In A Sentence
- blasphemed, or insulted, as it is understood by Grotius, who confirms this rendering from the Hebrew of Levit.xxiv. 11, where in this passage the Israelitish woman's son blasphemed the name of the Lord. The Grounds of Christianity Examined by Comparing The New Testament with the Old
- The Acts of the Apostles (excepting xxiv, 16-xxvi, 31), and a number of verses lacunous or entirely missing [Or. 7594]; The Apocalypse of The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 16 [Supplement]
- But those are hirelings that love the wages more than the work, and set their hearts upon that, as the hireling is said to do, Deut. xxiv. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
- _NH_ XXXIV 71 'habet simulacrum et benignitas eius [' Praxiteles 'generosity is seen in one of his statues']; Calamidis enim quadrigae aurigam suum imposuit, ne melior in equorum effigie defecisse in homine crederetur. ipse Calamis et alias quadrigas bigasque fecit equis sine aemulo expressis '. The Last Poems of Ovid
- He had never bartered promotion in the army for bribes, nor peculated in the supplies of provisions for the army." l.v. c. xxxiv. History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 3
- _NH_ XXXIV 71 'habet simulacrum et benignitas eius [' Praxiteles 'generosity is seen in one of his statues']; Calamidis enim quadrigae aurigam suum imposuit, ne melior in equorum effigie defecisse in homine crederetur. ipse Calamis et alias quadrigas bigasque fecit equis sine aemulo expressis '. The Last Poems of Ovid
- * Botton and the anthroposophical worldview at "An accidental blog" posts some notes on Rudolph Steiner HT: Christian Carnival LXXIV. Archive 2005-06-01
- As Anne K. Mellor points out (in her introduction to the novel, p. xxiv), it may be significant that Verney succumbs to the plague when, heearing a moan, he compassionately but incautiously enters a dark room where he is 'clasped' by a Note: Mellor
- What was said of sinners in general (Isa.xxiv. 17, 18), that those who flee from the fear shall fall into the pit and those who come up out of the pit shall be taken in the snare, is here particularly foretold concerning the sinners of Moab (v. 44); for it is the year of their visitation, when God comes to reckon with them, and will be known by the judgments which he executes, for he is the King whose name is the Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
- And the feeling for those he loved survived them, and it is monstrous to represent its unspoken and controlled/[Page xxxiv]/expression in obeisance and gesture as a sign of "agonising remorse. New Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle