10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «EBRIOSITY»
Discover the use of
ebriosity in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
ebriosity and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The American Jurist and Law Magazine
If we have thus far considered an offence as unpunishable, when committed by
one in a state of insanity resulting from ebriosity, we hold it also to be our duty, to
warn the judge not to suffer himself to be deceived by many phenomena which ...
Luther Stearns Cushing, Charles Sumner, George Stillman Hillard,
1840
2
The American Jurist and Law Magazine
If we have thus far considered an offence as unpunishable, when committed by
one in a state of insanity resulting from ebriosity, we hold it also to be our duty, to
warn the judge not to suffer himself to be deceived by many phenomena which ...
3
The Pacific Record Vol VI No 1
But above all it is ebriosity itself that is engendered and developed by this habit,
the early custom of stimulation calling for renewed and increasing satisfaction. . I
was much interested in the confirmation by Demme of an old notion according to
...
4
A critical pronouncing dictionary
EBRIOSITY, e-bri-os'e-te, ». Habitual drunkenness. EBULLITION, Ib-ul-lish'un, s.
177. The act of boiling up with heat ; any intestine motion ; effervescence.
ECCENTRICAL, Ik-sin'tre-kll, \t. Devi- ECCENTRICK, eVslntrik, J ating from the
centre ...
5
Transcendentalism: Essential Essays of Emerson and Thoreau: ...
disconcerted – confused or shaken discretion – judgment disdain – scorn
disencumbering – relieving dissimulation – deception ebriosity – [archaic]
drunkenness éclat – brilliance or excellence effigy – an imitation or likeness
eloquent ...
Emerson, Ralph Waldo and Henry David Thoreau,
2008
6
Walden with Thoreau's Essay "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience"
Such apparently slight causes destroyed Greece and Rome, and will destroy
England and America. Of all ebriosity, who does not pre- fer to be intoxicated by
the air he breathes? I have found it to be the most serious objection to coarse
labors ...
Henry David Thoreau,
2007
7
The Solicitors' Journal and Reporter
Current Topics (continued) — Alcoholism, 485 Ameer Khan and Hashmadad
Khan, Cases of, 2, 92 American Lawyers, Ebriosity of, 861 Architect, Right of, to
Retain Plans, 35 Army Purchase — The Royal Warrant, 725 — Sir Roundell
Palmer's ...
8
Encyclopaedia Perthensis; or, Universal dictionary of ...
Bitter almonds, as an antidote against ebricty, hath commonly failed. Brown. *
EBRILLADE. n.s [Fpnch.] A check of the bridle which a horseman gives a horse,
by a jerk of one rein, when he refuses to turn. * EBRIOSITY. n.s. \ebriofiUs, Latin.
Encyclopaedia Perthensis,
1816
9
Pseudodoxia epidemica, books 4-7. The garden of Cyrus. ...
And surely that religion which excuseth the fact of Noah, in the aged surprisal of
six hundred years, and unexpected inebriation from the unknown effects of wine,
will neither acquit ebriosity 6 nor ebriety, in their known. * De Formate Fcetu.
Sir Thomas Browne, Simon Wilkin,
1835
10
The American Jurist and Law Magazine
If we have thus far considered an offence as unpunishable, when committed by
one in a state of insanity resulting from ebriosity, we hold it also to be our duty, to
warn the judge not to suffer himself to be deceived by many phenomena which ...