Proceedings of the Literary & Philosophical Society of Liverpool, Volumen18The Society, 1864 |
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Página 16
... cent calculations of Sir William Armstrong as to the probable duration of our coal - fields , to which England owes so much of her greatness and power , have naturally excited consi- derable alarm as to the future of our country ; but ...
... cent calculations of Sir William Armstrong as to the probable duration of our coal - fields , to which England owes so much of her greatness and power , have naturally excited consi- derable alarm as to the future of our country ; but ...
Página 110
... cent . per annum . By receiving this high rate of interest these societies are enabled to give a proportionately high rate of interest on the money entrusted to them , and become an eligible investment for those small sums which form ...
... cent . per annum . By receiving this high rate of interest these societies are enabled to give a proportionately high rate of interest on the money entrusted to them , and become an eligible investment for those small sums which form ...
Página 112
... cent . , with the premiums charged , can ever realise 7 per cent . upon the capital of the Society , you will be told that you under- estimate the value of monthly payments , and that it is not only on the 5 months ' interest that they ...
... cent . , with the premiums charged , can ever realise 7 per cent . upon the capital of the Society , you will be told that you under- estimate the value of monthly payments , and that it is not only on the 5 months ' interest that they ...
Página 113
... cent . per annum , or 32 per cent . This extraordinary increase is of course realised upon only a part of the money , and upon that only while it is a payment in advance . But as all the money pays 5 per cent . in addition to the ...
... cent . per annum , or 32 per cent . This extraordinary increase is of course realised upon only a part of the money , and upon that only while it is a payment in advance . But as all the money pays 5 per cent . in addition to the ...
Página 114
... cent . per annum , to 1.0332 times the sum of the payments ; at 5 per cent . they would amount to 1.02492 . It appears then , at 7 per cent . , the advantage of monthly payment is 73d . per pound on the total payments for the year ; and ...
... cent . per annum , to 1.0332 times the sum of the payments ; at 5 per cent . they would amount to 1.02492 . It appears then , at 7 per cent . , the advantage of monthly payment is 73d . per pound on the total payments for the year ; and ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abundant AGROTIS Almond amongst amount Anglo-Saxon animals annum appears aspirate balance Bidston Hill Bidston Marsh Bidston Park Wood bird Birkenhead British Bromborough Building Society Burton cent centenarians Cheshire CIDARIA Claughton COLEOPHORA COLLINGWOOD column counties Crumpsall deaths DEPRESSARIA derived district dividend Eastham Wood England English EUPITHECIA existence Family Fauna fish forests GELECHIA Genus Gothic Greek Grimm's law heat High German Hollandish Journal known forces Lancashire language large number Latin laws Ledsham LITHOCOLLETIS Liverpool Manchester medial Mersey meteor monthly instalments mortgages Mount Wood Museum nature observed Occasionally taken Old Frisian Old High German Old Low German ORDINARY MEETING paid paper payments Pennant PICTON premium Prenton Prenton Mount Wood present value Proceedings Puddington realise remarkable river Rock Ferry ROYAL INSTITUTION Sanskrit says scale Seems scarce species specimen Table tenuis Teutonic TINEA Tranmere tube verb vital principle Wallasey sand hills word
Pasajes populares
Página 47 - unto an holy temple in the Lord; in whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit." Gothic—" Ana-timridai ana grunduvaddjau apaustaule jah profete at visandin auhumistin vaihstastaina silbin Xristau iesu ; in thamma alia
Página 60 - of the original Greek, which similarly combines the two shades of meaning. The Gothic galaubjan became contracted into the German glauben, and the parallel forms quoted above are merely dialectic variations. The double sense of trust and belief is well shewn in the following passage from the Anglo-Saxon version of the Gospels. Matthew ix, 2, " And Jesus seeing their faith, said unto the sick of the palsy,
Página 11 - ADDRESS. I have to thank you most sincerely for the honour you have conferred upon me in electing me to the office of President of the Literary and Philosophical Society. The chair which has been filled hy Roscoe,
Página ix - Sidmouth, Devonshire. Nov. 18, 1861 Nugent, Rev. James, Crosby. Mar. 23, 1863 Page, Rev. George C., LL.D., Gambier House, Fairfield. Nov. 4, 1861 Philip, Thomas D., 49, South Castle-street, a.nd 47, Prospect-vale, Fairfield. Dec. 28, 1846 Picton, James Allanson, FSA, Chairman of the Library and Museum Committee, 11, Dale-street, and Sandy-knowe, Wavertree. PRESIDENT.
Página v - and 99, Shaw-street. *April 6, 1840 Dickinson, Joseph, MA , MD Dub., FRS, FRCP MRIA, FLS, 92, Bedford-street South. Nov. 27, 1848 Dove, Percy Matthew, FSS, 1, North John-street, and Claughton. Nov. 27, 1863 Dove, Jno. M., Royal Insurance Office, and Claughton. Jan. 23, 1848 Drysdale, John James, MD, Edin., MRCS, Edin. 44, Rodney-street.
Página 75 - animalcule or a seed. But a moment's reflection will make it plain how vast a step is taken if we gain from science the admission that her kingdom is not universal. None will be more ready than the man of science to confess how little is that which is known, when compared with that which still remains to
Página 86 - the permanence of form and structure observable during many generations of the same species. 5th, the absence of any indications as to what becomes of the vital principle at death. 6th, the periodicity of life. generis, but the question naturally arises, how far, supposing our conclusion to be a right one, a demonstrative proof is possible. An instance somewhat parallel may
Página 75 - be shown that vitality, even in a vegetable cell, is a thing which lies beyond the scope of scientific investigation, the spell is broken, and a claim is established for the determination of what may or may not constitute the higher faculties of man, on other grounds than
Página 82 - spot on the petal of a Pelargonium could in no conceivable way have been produced through the agencies of chemical affinities, heat, electricity, and the like, except from the existence of some corresponding physical starting point in the seed. This is admitted by some who question the existence of a vital principle;
Página 77 - its place by no means on the confines of the animal kingdom. Discoveries relating to the allotropic forms of matter and the correlation of the imponderable forces, warrant the same conclusion as to the close affinity subsisting between inorganic things. In fact, that " nature does not proceed by a leap " might seem to be a rule that lacks the criterion of