10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PRECISIANIST»
Discover the use of
precisianist in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
precisianist and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The
Precisianist Strain: Disciplinary Religion & Antinomian ...
In an examination of transatlantic Puritanism from 1570 to 1638, Theodore Dwight Bozeman analyzes the quest for purity through sanctification.
Theodore Dwight Bozeman, 2004
2
Lectures on preaching and sermon construction
For instance, a precisianist will conscientiously pronounce both “ r's ” in “ dearer ”
in the verse “the law of Thy mouth is dearer to me.” I have heard these two “ r's ”
rolled with such precision that it sounded like the rattle of side-drums, and the ...
3
New England New Jerusalem: The Millenarian Dimension of ...
Among a multiplicity of motives and precisianist purposes to create new
transatlantic communities with gathered churches, a consideration of these
biblically based ideas helps to clarify the colonial enterprise.1 The investigation
takes issue ...
4
Anglican and Episcopal History
Stachniewski discerns a "dark shadow" on the work of Marlowe, Donne, Burton,
and Bunyan, the puritan precisianists' "persecutory imagination," which morbidly
marked early modern literature. Of course, the precisianist strain on stage or in ...
5
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: A Work of Universal ...
He was ever precise in promise-keeping. precisianist (pre-sizh'an-ist), ». [<
precisian Shak., M. for M., i. 2. 76. + -j who adheres strictly to any doctrine,
practice, or rule of conduct; a precisian. Of course there are yet some
precisianists that will ...
William Dwight Whitney, 1906
6
Where I've been, and where I'm going: essays, reviews, and prose
Technically proficient, both as a photographer and an artist, he has been
identified as a "Precisianist" in the numerous ambitious works of industrial
structures, skyscrapers, and machinery which brought him considerable renown
in the ...
7
An English-Welsh pronouncing dictionary: with an analysis of ...
... s. manyl- rwydd; gorfanylrwydd, defodolrwydd Precisian, pri-sizh'-an, s.
defodwr, def- odolwr, defodur Precisianism, pri-sis'-ian-ism, s. gorfan- ylwch,
gorfanoldeh, gorfanylder; man- ylrwydd ofergoelus Precisianist, pri-sis'-ian-ist,s.
gorfanylwr, ...
8
Ethica; Or, Characteristics of Men, Manners & Books
I have already traced the growth of the revolutionist. But coat, conduct, and ship
money, though they may have produced the republican, did not produce the
precisianist. Constitutional tyranny may have been responsible for the Regicide,
but it ...
Arthur Lloyd Windsor, 1860
9
The history of English democratic ideas in the seventeenth ...
Thinking to strengthen his case, the author of The Sufferings of the Clergy
complains that they were treated 'with all possible contempt and insolence3.' That
a part of their unpopularity may be explained by the precisianist notions of the ...
George Peabody Gooch, 1898
10
Intolerance in the reign of Elizabeth, Queen of England
The Protestants whom Parker had called Precisianist, developed an
ecclesiastical theory antagonistic to the established organization, and angrily
hurled at the heads of Anglicanism reproaches 1 Parker Corresp., no. ccclxix. Cf.
S. P., Dom.