अंग्रेज़ी किताबें जो «UNREMORSELESS» से संबंधित हैं
निम्नलिखित ग्रंथसूची चयनों में
unremorseless का उपयोग पता करें।
unremorseless aसे संबंधित किताबें और अंग्रेज़ी साहित्य में उसके उपयोग का संदर्भ प्रदान करने वाले उनके संक्षिप्त सार।.
1
The Sayings and Doings of Samuel Slick, Esq: Together with ...
We are not free ; we are slaves : one half of us is tyrants — unremorseless,
onfeelin', over- bearin' tyrants, and vile usurpers ; and the other half slaves —
abject, miserable, degraded slaves. The first argument, I advance, sir, is this' —
and the ...
Thomas Chandler Haliburton, 1858
2
Affixes in Their Origin and Application: Exhibiting the ...
The un- is intensive in unloose (Ang. onlegen, on- ^meaning info, (o,)
unremorseless. Obs. 2. In some words un- has displaced the Latin in-, as in
unambitious, ungenial, unhumbled, unnumbered, unfortunate. In- is used where
assimilation is ...
Samuel Stehman Haldeman, 1871
3
The clockmaker: or, The sayings and doings of Sam Slick, of ...
We are not free ; we are slaves : one half of us is tyrants, — unremorseless,
onfeelin', overbearin' tyrants, and vile usurpers ; and the other half slaves, —
abject, miserable, degraded slaves. The first argument I advance, sir, is this —
and the ...
Thomas Chandler Haliburton, 1841
4
On Some Deficiencies in Our English Dictionaries: Being the ...
Vordsworth (where P) unrelinqmshed. Cowper (where P) unrelished unremarked
unremedied. (where P) 3 unremembrance unremittiugly unremorseless. (where P
) unremunerated unre airable. (w ere P) 3 unrepeated unrepelled unrepiningly.
Richard Chenevix Trench, 1857
5
A New Dictionary of the English Language ...
... unrip, unrude, wished, unsta- blished, untrimmed, unmerciless, unremorseless
? What of the prefix, du, in rfi'i-sever, c/u-unite ? SECOND SERIES. WORDS
RECEIVED FROM THE LATIN. What prepositions — Latin and English — do we
use ...
6
The clockmaker, or, The sayings and doings of Samuel Slick ...
... us is tyrants, — unremorseless, onfeelin', overbearin' tyrants, and vile usurpers;
and the other half slaves, — abject, miserable, degraded slaves. The first
argument I advance, sir, is this — and the cold in my nose began to tickle, tickle,
tickle, ...
Thomas Chandler Haliburton, 1862
7
Tyrannosaurus Lex: The Marvelous Book of Palindromes, ...
... heritable inheritable loose unloose quite a few quite a lot ravel unravel restive
restless shameful shameless slow up slow down unremorseless remorseless
valuable invaluable beagle eagle bone one bonus onus breach reach bread
read.
8
The works of the English poets. With prefaces, biographical ...
The Roman Tully's pleasing eloquence, Which in the ears did lock up every
sense Of the rapt hearer; his mellifluous breath Could not at all charm
unremorseless Death; Nor Solon, so by Greece admir'd, could save Himself, with
all his wisdom, ...
We are not free, we are slaves; one half of us is tyrants — unremorseless,
onfeeliu', overbearin' tyrants, and vile usurpers; aud the other half slaves —
abject, miserable, degraded slaves. The first argument I advance, sir, is this — □
and the ...
John Holmes Agnew, Washington Irving, 1840
10
Principles of Public Speaking: Comprising the Techniques of ...
The un- is intensive in unloose (Ang. onlesen, on- meaning into, to),
unremorseless. " Obs. 2. In some words un- has displaced the Latin in-, as in
unambitious, ungenial, unhumbled, unfortunate. In- is used where assimilation is
required, ...