Volume 8
Contains 3 Results:
An account of an air-pump on a new construction; with some observations on the common air-pump, and Mr. Smeaton's improvement: in a letter from the Rev. John Prince to the Rev. Joseph Willard, President of the University of Cambridge / by John Prince, 1783
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
A dissertation on the influence of opinions on language and of language on opinions, which gained the Prussian Royal Academy's prize on that subject. Containing many curious particulars in philology, natural history, and the scriptural phraseology. Together with an enquiry into the advantages and practicability of an universal learned language / by Mr. Michaelis, court-counsellor to his Britannic majesty, and director of the Royal Society at Goettingen, 1769
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
An oration, delivered before the American Philosophical Society, held in Philadelphia on the 27th of February, 1786; containing an enquiry into the influence of physical causes upon the moral faculty / by Benjamin Rush, M.D., and professor of chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, 1786
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.