College Readings in English ProseFrank William Scott, Jacob Zeitlin Macmillan Company, 1926 - 703 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 95
Página vii
... present revision . But in the process , the whole body of Exposition and Argument was thoroughly renovated . The additions con- sist of ( 1 ) a number of articles of greater weight and elaborateness than those in the original edition on ...
... present revision . But in the process , the whole body of Exposition and Argument was thoroughly renovated . The additions con- sist of ( 1 ) a number of articles of greater weight and elaborateness than those in the original edition on ...
Página 4
... present . Most important in this class are successions of imaginative inci- dents and episodes which , having a certain coherence , hang- ing together on a continuous thread , lie between kaleido- scopic flights of fancy and ...
... present . Most important in this class are successions of imaginative inci- dents and episodes which , having a certain coherence , hang- ing together on a continuous thread , lie between kaleido- scopic flights of fancy and ...
Página 7
... present pri- marily in the fact that to - day the greater or more important instruments of production are owned by individuals called capitalists , who hire thousands of men to work for them , and who manage industry with an eye only to ...
... present pri- marily in the fact that to - day the greater or more important instruments of production are owned by individuals called capitalists , who hire thousands of men to work for them , and who manage industry with an eye only to ...
Página 12
... present day sees a widespread interest in social reform measures in all coun- tries . Social reform contains the dominant features of capital- ism , i.e. the private ownership of industry and the two eco- nomically antagonistic classes ...
... present day sees a widespread interest in social reform measures in all coun- tries . Social reform contains the dominant features of capital- ism , i.e. the private ownership of industry and the two eco- nomically antagonistic classes ...
Página 39
... present it can sweep aside the ordinary routine and bring in a schedule of action which will enable the House to get at the most important questions . VII . The Speaker and the committees are not unrestricted in their action . A. The ...
... present it can sweep aside the ordinary routine and bring in a schedule of action which will enable the House to get at the most important questions . VII . The Speaker and the committees are not unrestricted in their action . A. The ...
Contenido
1 | |
27 | |
34 | |
50 | |
84 | |
93 | |
126 | |
153 | |
307 | |
310 | |
325 | |
334 | |
352 | |
421 | |
439 | |
459 | |
159 | |
167 | |
182 | |
202 | |
213 | |
220 | |
228 | |
234 | |
240 | |
250 | |
263 | |
280 | |
301 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
American animals Assembly beauty become bees believe better body brown pelicans called Cape Horn cell character Child Labor Amendment committee Constitution Council courage course court democracy democratic effect Eighteenth Amendment English equal eyes fact fear feeling give Greek Greek poetry hand hive honey House human industry intelligence interest Invisible Woman kind labor larvæ League of Nations less liberty light living look machine majority matter means ment mind modern moral Muscle Shoals nature never once opinion organization ourselves party passed passion political possible present protoplasm queen question Reprinted by permission royal jelly rule seems Senate sense Single-Taxers social Speaker spirit things thought tion treaty turn Waverley Novels whole words workers World Court young