| Daniel Drake, Lunsford Pitts Yandell - 1840 - 516 sider
...of its effects on others, and because it does not always manifest itself by determinate and uniform sensations. They do not feel the cold, but they have...they sink under the action of an unknown cause."* In the management of children, a practice directly opposed to that which these observations suggest,... | |
| Richard Tonson Evanson, Henry Maunsell - 1848 - 440 sider
...of its effects on others, and because it does not always manifest itself by determinate and uniform sensations. They do not feel the cold, but they have...they sink under the action of an unknown cause. It is more likely to be unknown, because the injurious effects of cold do not always manifest themselves... | |
| 1852 - 604 sider
...of its effects on others, and because it docs not always manifest itself by determinate and uniform sensations. They do not feel the cold, but they have...likely to be unknown, because the injurious effects of eold do not always manifest themselves during, or immediately after, its application ; the changes... | |
| Edwin Lee - 1855 - 182 sider
...clothed, a standard author observes:—" They do not feel the cold, but they experience an uneasiness and an indisposition which arises from it; their constitution...themselves during or immediately after its application, and the constitution is altered without the cause being suspected. The use of warm clothing is often... | |
| Edwin Lee - 1857 - 148 sider
...they experience an uneasiness and an indisposition which arises from it; their constitutions become deteriorated by passing through the alternations of...themselves during or immediately after its application, and the constitution is altered without the cause being suspected. The use of warm clothing is often... | |
| 1857 - 536 sider
...of its effect on others, and because it does not always manifest itself by determinate and uniform sensations. They do not feel the cold, but they have an uneasiness or indisposition arising from it; their constitution becomes deteriorated by passing through the alternations... | |
| Edwin Lee - 1858 - 242 sider
...they experience an uneasiness and an indisposition which arises from it ; their constitutions become deteriorated by passing through the alternations of...themselves during or immediately after its application, and the constitution is altered without the cause being suspected. The use of warm clothing is often... | |
| Richard Tonson Evanson, Henry Maunsell - 1848 - 440 sider
...of its effects on others, and because it does not always manifest itself by determinate and uniform sensations. They do not feel the cold, but they have...they sink under the action of an unknown cause. It is more likely to be unknown, because the injurious effects of cold do not always manifest themselves... | |
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