10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «UNDERWORKER»
Discover the use of
underworker in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
underworker and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Race Against Time: Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis in ...
Both men, the underworker and the overworker, came from hardworking families,
had experienced the great economic depression of the 1930s, and regarded
working as the symbol and the reality of security. Both valued the work ethic.
Robert A. Nemiroff, Calvin A. Colarusso, 1985
2
Athanasius: The Coherence of his Thought
... directly by God, while the rest of creation was created indirectly, through the
Son: "The Father alone fashioned with his own hand only the Son, and all other
things were brought to be by the Son as by an underworker" (De Decretis 7).
... a series of years : United States the year has less working days for coal
DIFFERENCES IN LABOR COSTS 163. 1911 1914 1918 Per Per Per Per Per Per
UnderWorker UnderWorker UnderWorker ground of Every ground of Every
ground of ...
UN. ESCAP. Secretariat, 1927
4
The Philosophy of Charles Hartshorne
Despite the formal equality on which Hartshome graciously insisted, I felt myself
very much the underworker, especially at the start. We began with Charles
marking passages in books from his own library, which we expected to include in
the ...
... in Rome, and in England before, ' an usurping populace is its own dupe; a
mere underworker,' as Swift expressed it a hundred years ago, 'and purchaser in
trust for some single tyrant, whose state and power they advance to their own ruin
, ...
6
Miscellanies. The Fifth Ed., Corrected with Several ...
... the people, yet they generally concluded in that of a single person; so that an
usurping populacc is its own Dlcþt; , a meer Underworker, and a Purchaser in
Trust sor some single Tyrant, whose State and Power they advance to their own
ruin, ...
Jonathan Swift, John Arbuthnot, John Gay, 1747
But the results of his mission are not solely to individuals; he is the ambassador
of all possible and practicable advantages, the underworker, unsuspected and
unconscious, of all the developments of the future. We do not know, save in a
very ...
8
Dialect of south Lancashire, or Tim Bobbin's Tummus and ...
Snob, a shoemaker, or rather a cobler, a patch- er, an underworker. Snoblint,
snow-bliud, short sighted. Snod, smooth, sleek, and snug. Snoode, a fillet to tie
up a woman's hair. (obs.) Snook, to smell, to go prying about other people's
affairs.
John Collier, Samuel Bamford, 1850
9
Memoirs of the Late William Cobbett, Esq., M.P. for Oldham: ...
... particular friends at Liverpool, that I never would be the underworker of Sir
Francis Burdett again,and that I would have nothing to do with him any more than
with any other common person; that I never would consult with him, and in short
that ...
10
Beauties of Cobbett. Being extracts from the 12 vols. of the ...
... underworker, like many others, and therefore is not to be reckdned' among the
miscreant Mirabeaus, Condorcets, 81c; whose puppet he was; but he
nevertheless comes in for a considerable share of that censurewhich is due to a ...