999 resultados para Jacobson, William, 1803-1884.
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v. 1. Life, etc. The tempest. The two gentlemen of Verona. The merry wives of Windsor. Measure for measure.--v. 2. The comedy of errors. Much ado about nothing. Love's labour's lost. A midsummer night's dream. The merchant of Venice.--v. 3. As you like it. The taming of the shrew. All's well that ends well. Twelfth-night. The winter's tale.--v. 4. King John. King Richard II. King Henry IV. Pts. I-II. King Henry V.--v. 5. King Henry VI. Pts. I-III. King Richard III. King Henry VIII.--v. 6. Triolus and Cressida. Coriolanus. Titus Andronicus. Romeo and Juliet. Timon of Athens. Julius Caesar.--v. 7. Macbeth. Hamlet. King Lear. Othello. Antony and Cleopatra. Cymbeline.--v. 8. Pericles. The two noble kinsmen. Venus and Adonis. Lucrece. Sonnets. A lover's complaint. The passionate pilgrim. The phoenix and turtle.--v. 9. Glossary.
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Reminiscences of royal and noble personages during the last and present centuries: v. 5, p. [341]-396.
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Index at end of each volume: Classified subject index to the set at end of v. 4.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Reprint of the author's thesis, Columbia University.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Reminiscences of royal and noble personages during the last and present centuries: v.5, p. [341]-396.
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I. Robespierre. Carlyle. Byron. Macaulay. Emerson. --II. Vauvenargues. Turgot. Condorcet. Joseph de Maistre. --III. On popular culture. The death of Mr. Mill. Mr. Mill's Autobiography. The life of George Eliot. On Pattison's Memoirs. Harriet Martineau. W.R. Greg; a sketch. France in the eighteenth century. The expansion of England. Auguste Comte.
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Food habits of jaguarundi (Puma yagouaroundi) (Geoffroy, 1803) (Carnivora, Felidae) were studied between November 2000 and November 2001, in a 24.9 km² area of secondary Atlantic Rainforest and eucalypt plantation, in the Serra de Paranapiacaba, São Paulo State, Brazil. Analyses of 26 fecal and regurgitate samples, obtained over a stretch of 570.1 km, showed the consumption of 19 prey items and 74 prey occurrences. Small mammals were the most frequent food item (42.5%), followed by birds (21%), reptiles (14%) and medium-sized mammals (3%). The percent occurrence (PO) suggests that the diet consisted mainly of small rodents (30%) and birds (21%). We recorded for the first time the predation of Viperidae snakes by P. yagouaroundi. Although having a large list of items and range of dietary niche breadths (Bsta = 0.76), our data show that jaguarundi prey mainly on small vertebrates (mammals, birds or reptiles), and even in tall tropical forests or eucalypt plantations, it preys mostly on animals that come to, or live on, the ground.
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Universidade Estadual de Campinas . Faculdade de Educação Física
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Pimelodus multicratifer, a new species, is described from the rio Ribeira de Iguape basin. The new species differs from the other Pimelodus species by the following features: 26 to 30 gill rakers on the first branchial arch; a combination of three to six rows of dark spots regularly or irregularly scattered on the flanks and several small dark spots irregularly scattered on the dorsal surface of head, supraoccipital process, and sometimes on the dorsal and caudal fins; striated lips; maxillary barbels reaching between posterior tip of the pelvic-fin rays and posterior tip of the middle caudal-fin rays.
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William St building-Riverside Expressway building junction.
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Published in the final months of 1891, Architecture, Mysticism and Myth was the first architectural treatise written by the late nineteenth-century English architect and theorist William Richard Lethaby (1857-1931).' Documenting the characteristic attributes of the architectural myth of the "temple idea", and its presence amongst architectures of multiple ancient cultures, the text was endowed with a distinctly historical tone. In examining the motives behind myth, which Lethaby defined as the interaction and reaction between the natural universe and the built environment, Lethaby also injected a series of theoretical considerations into the text. It is clear that Lethaby's interest in the temple idea was not limited to its curious, prolific presence in past architectures, hut also embraced a consideration of what lessons the temple idea may contribute to the struggle of the late nineteenth-century English architect to define an "art of the future".