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| Alphabetical [« »] profits 14 profound 6 profusion 1 progress 22 progressed 1 prohibited 1 prohibitive 1 | Frequency [« »] 22 full 22 got 22 place 22 progress 22 steam-engine 22 such 22 three | Thomas H. Marshall James Watt IntraText - Concordances progress |
Art.
1 1| manifestations of the movement of progress, the activity of the closing 2 1| a palpable eject on the progress of civilisation were those 3 1| investigation. Where all was new, progress was rapid; they were tilling 4 1| the true road to economic progress lay in the application of 5 1| the Royal Society, and the progress we have made in Experimental 6 2| class, where he made rapid progress." This seems to be the most 7 3| interrupted in his course of progress. In six weeks he had outstripped 8 4| devoted disciples.~Real progress began with the work of Dionysius 9 5| since the chief obstacle to progress in his industry was the 10 5| felt he was making great progress. " I am going to be at home, 11 5| had not made one inch of progress since the day that the idea 12 6| understand exactly how much progress Watt had made, where he 13 6| delicacy on both sides, that no progress could be made.~The commercial 14 6| Glasgow was an enemy to all progress and innovation. But Birmingham 15 7| absence of the master mind, progress was slow. " The engine goes 16 7| where operations were in progress. Soon Boulton provided him 17 7| spite of the rapidity of the progress he was making, Boulton's 18 8| industry was making very rapid progress. A modern observer might 19 8| trying to estimate human progress, hesitate to employ the 20 9| conditions he made good progress with his invention. In 1807 21 9| suppose by the rapidity of his progress and puffing, he is too volatile 22 9| the general rate of social progress as our standard, we must