10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «INVULNERABLENESS»
Discover the use of
invulnerableness in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
invulnerableness and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Dictionarium Scoto-Celticum: a Dictionary of the Gaelic ...
Invulnerableness: conditio rei vel cujus minime vulneri obnoxia C. S. Do-
bEUGHAum, adj. Illegible: haud lectu facilis. DO-bEUGHTA, l C. S. Do-imuon'
mcun, s. ind. rei haud lectu facilis. C. S. _ DO-tiONAIDH, adj. Insaturable:
insaturabilis.
2
A Dictionary of English Synonymes and Synonymous Or Parallel ...
6. Twine, intwine, intertwine, interweave, interlace, inweave, twist together.
Invulnerability, n. Invulnerableness. Invulnerable, a. Secure from injury, that
cannot be wounded. Invulnerableness, n. Invulnerability. Inward, a. Interior,
internal, inner.
3
Theokratia: or a vindication of the doctrine commonly ...
... part of the world ffibul: nerable : Why for all the world , should not their
invulnerableness detcrr you from smittng them -9 Ithink you would havebeen
wary how you adventured on smiting of a man that were irivulilcrabfc 5 for though
there were ...
4
Dictionary of the German and English Languages: Abridged: in ...
lUvcrlctbarfcit, Uiuxrlefcli^teit, /. inviolable- ness; invulnerableness. Hnocrle&t, adj
. not violated ; unhurt, safe. Unt>erl6f(f)&ar,UiwiIo|"rf)lid), adj. inextinguishable.
Miiun-iiKitlirlj, adj. Sf adv. unavoidable; inevitable ; — ly, llnuermnblic^eit,/.
Johann Gottfried Flügel, 1856
5
The Book of the Indians; Or, Biography and History of the ...
To give to the conduct of the Plimouth government a pretext for this murder, (a
milder expression I cannot use,) Mr. Hubbard says, Tuspaquin having pretended
that a bullet could not penetrate him, trial of his invulnerableness was resolved ...
Samuel Gardner Drake, 1841
6
Italy, Past and Present
The perfection to which the Milanese armourers had brought their manufacture of
defensive weapons, had gone far to secure the absolute invulnerableness of
man and horse. Valour, directed by foresight and intelligence, gave rise to that ...
Antonio Carlo Napoleone Gallenga, 1848
Touch them, and like the tortoise, they shrink into the invulnerableness of self,
and defy all impression. The Slave Trade was a defined and palpable evil, known
and easily apprehended in all its dimensions and all its bearings 2 War is a ...
Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Josiah Conder, 1817
8
Vollständiges Wörterbuch Der Englischen Sprache Für Die ...
( Cuaz )i i- es main bit' nicht unvergsstm bleiben, l llffl-Wifflllssiflfeis, bit,
Invulnerableness, Unv P ( sop) unvermösend zu zahlen , not able. Ljnv_ thou wilt
not lose thy Rcwardflby Labour. unuergbnzzet, adj. a' adu. unpcrmitlcd,
unallowed.
quired a kind of invulnerableness to an attack, by any legitimate kind of warfare.
Thus by a universal law of force and motion based upon Kepler's great law, that
the squares of the periods are as the cubes of the mean distances, we find that ...
10
Popular Epics of the Middle Ages of the Norse-German and ...
But such a coarse material rendering of the idea of invulnerableness indicates of
itself the degeneracy of poetical conception.* The cycle of Norse-German epic,
properly so called, is worked out. But as that cycle has for one of its starting- ...
John Malcolm Forbes Ludlow, 1865