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| Alphabetical [« »] man-hater 1 man-of-war 1 mankind 29 manner 46 manners 3 mansiones 1 mansions 1 | Frequency [« »] 47 people 46 into 46 little 46 manner 46 never 46 reason 44 first | François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire Letters on the English or Lettres Philosophiques IntraText - Concordances manner |
Letter
1 I | before his time, in like manner as the Mahometans imitated 2 II | groaning in a most lamentable manner, he, partly from his nose 3 III | in so strong and moving a manner, that fifty of the auditors 4 III | that he must speak in a manner different from the rest 5 III | exhale it in a forcible manner, insomuch that the priestess 6 III | deliver himself in any other manner. This was the first gift 7 IV | think himself bound in any manner to renounce his principles, 8 IV | others, lost his kingdom in a manner that is hardly to be accounted 9 V | native country, in the same manner as the Guelphs and Ghibellines 10 V | it is in a very serious manner, and without giving the 11 VIII | congratulated him in a public manner. Our civil wars under Charles 12 XI | their mothers, in the same manner as little girls among us 13 XI | of condition owe in this manner their lives to her Majesty 14 XI | at the nose, in the same manner as we take snuff. This is 15 XIII | the soul in the very same manner as we do.~The divine Anaxagoras, 16 XIII | composed of parts in the same manner as the body.~Aristotle, 17 XIII | and yet wrote in such a manner, that one would conclude 18 XIII | as thought, in the same manner as matter, in his opinion, 19 XIII | the human soul in the same manner as an excellent anatomist 20 XIII | in the womb (though to no manner of purpose) knowledge which 21 XIII | matter cannot think. In this manner do the schools reason.~Mr. 22 XIII | gentlemen in the candid, sincere manner following: At least confess 23 XIII | able to comprehend in what manner a body is susceptible of 24 XIII | conceive better in what manner a substance, of what kind 25 XIII | you who confine in this manner the power of the Creator. 26 XIV | private life and in his manner of reasoning. This imagination 27 XV | towards the sun, in like manner as the moon gravitates towards 28 XV | every planet; and in this manner shows, from the simple laws 29 XVI | celestial bodies move and the manner how light acts. Galileo, 30 XVI | be put in action, in like manner as a long staff acts at 31 XVI | colour it bears; in like manner, as gold, when completely 32 XVI | of the rays, in the same manner as a ball on the surface 33 XVII | a hundred years. In this manner they computed eleven thousand 34 XVII | we still retain the same manner of speaking as the ancients 35 XVII | every hundred years. In this manner they were no less mistaken 36 XVII | astronomer who had argued in this manner would have mistook just 37 XVIII| Shakspeare in a servile manner. Woe to the writer who gives 38 XVIII| theatrical circle there, in like manner as in this city will suffer 39 XVIII| and dress it in the same manner as the trees of the Garden 40 XX | enlightened mind, in the same manner as a merchant is obliged 41 XXI | pretty near the following manner. But I must first desire 42 XXI | His poem begins in this manner:~"Il n'est plus, s'en est 43 XXIII| in that abbey in the same manner as those of Sophocles, Plato, 44 XXIV | more just and beautiful manner than those of the English. 45 XXIV | thinking at all: in like manner as people who should seem 46 XXIV | the same time are of no manner of use, and will not acquaint