10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «IMPASSABLENESS»
Discover the use of
impassableness in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
impassableness and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A dictionary of the Bengalee language. 2 vols. [in 3. Vol. 1 ...
(from 3i5taTT, immoveable), immoveableness, impassableness,
inaccessibleness. ^□.TSaflX *. (from 5ast5*j, immoveable), iuimoveableness,
impassableness, inaccessibleness. srnsfa, a. (from 51, prir. and flolj, <fcfp\
shallow, srsrsfon, t.
2
A Dictionary of the Bengala Language: In which the Words are ...
(from «f, prfa. and 5t3*T, passable), immoveable, impassable, inaccessible.
stsTCUSI, *. (fromsrsfBTr, immoveable), immoveableness, impassableness,
inaccessibleness. snf3*n, t . (from sisftKi, immoveable), immoveableness,
impassableness ...
3
A dictionary of the Bengalee language: in which the words ...
8mm, a. (from 'St, priv. and stow, passable'), immoveable, impassable,
inaccessible. arm s. (from um, s'mmooeable), immoveableness, impassableness,
iuaccessibleness. amt-st, s. Q from mm, immooeable), immoveableness,
impassableness ...
4
Chambers's English Dictionary: Pronouncing, Explanatory, and ...
IMPASSABLENESS, im-pas'a-bl-nes, n. The state of being impassable.
IMPASSABLY, im-pas'a-bli, adv. In a way or manner that prevents passing.
IMPASSIBILITY, im-pas-i-biTi-ti, n. The quality of being impassible :
insusceptibility of suffering.
James Donald (F.R.G.S.), 1872
5
Mysticism, Christian and Buddhist (Extended Annotated Edition)
Cannot this kind of knowledge he called also the knowledge of impassableness?
Is this not what a man gets when the "little point" makes him turn around God-way
in which all creatures, all distinctions, all comparisons, all ideas are done ...
Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, 2012
6
Outlines of the Comparative Physiology and Morphology of Animals
The difference is proportioned to the impassableness of the barrier and tile time
sinte tlze barrer was set up. This element of time connects the subject with the
idea of evolution of organic forms throughout all geological time. In a word, the
old ...
7
A Dictionary of the Bengalee Language, in which the words ...
(from $1,' priv. and US$11, pizssablc), impassable, as a river, not admitting of:
being crossed over. mofigfi'l, s. (from Sam, impassable), impassableness. mm, s.
(from mam, int. passable), impassableness. ii; m, a. (from 3!, friv. and {5%, 'a boat)
, ...
William CAREY (Baptist Missionary.), 1815
8
The Physiology of the Senses: Or, How and what We See, Hear, ...
When a child attempts to touch a fly, notwithstanding the intervention of a pane of
glass, we laugh at the child's simplicity ; but a man who should see glass for the
first time, would be as ignorant of its impassableness as an infant. Birds, under a
...
Alexander Bryan Johnson, 1856
9
Archives of Ophthalmology and Otology
... obstacle for the penetration of fluid into the cornea for the purpose of nutrition,
but certainly as a regulator. In consequence of the impassableness Of the
protoplasma, only so much can penetrate as is possible without disturbance of
function.
10
Evolution And Its Relation To Religious Thought
There is another element, not yet mentioned, which is just as important as
impassableness, but which until recently has been left entirely out of account.
This is the element of time — the amount of time since the barrier was set up, or
during ...