The Quarterly Journal of Education, Volum 5Charles Knight, 1833 |
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Side 8
... kind which have remainders , to make them perfectly intelligible , as follows : the child has been required to divide twenty - five counters among four persons ; after giving them six a - piece he finds he has one left . He must then be ...
... kind which have remainders , to make them perfectly intelligible , as follows : the child has been required to divide twenty - five counters among four persons ; after giving them six a - piece he finds he has one left . He must then be ...
Side 17
... kind of relationship exists between one verb and another , or one noun and another . As it is our present object merely to explain the advantages of some more complete and syste- matic exhibition of the etymological part , without at ...
... kind of relationship exists between one verb and another , or one noun and another . As it is our present object merely to explain the advantages of some more complete and syste- matic exhibition of the etymological part , without at ...
Side 28
... kind of word that any language has to offer . This tense and the imperfect , which indeed depends on it , are the great irregu larities in the Greek language . We must likewise except such verbs as σteλλw , μevw , & c . , where the root ...
... kind of word that any language has to offer . This tense and the imperfect , which indeed depends on it , are the great irregu larities in the Greek language . We must likewise except such verbs as σteλλw , μevw , & c . , where the root ...
Side 31
... kind , it is referred to the head- master , or , in the case of the King's scholars , to the Dean of Westminster , who is supreme . In case of illness , a King's scholar is removed from the dormitory to the house where he lived when a ...
... kind , it is referred to the head- master , or , in the case of the King's scholars , to the Dean of Westminster , who is supreme . In case of illness , a King's scholar is removed from the dormitory to the house where he lived when a ...
Side 56
... kind , which we have hinted at , it is next to nothing when compared with the advantages resulting from the union of so large a body . Indeed , we are of opinion , that so long as the education given at these schools impresses boys with ...
... kind , which we have hinted at , it is next to nothing when compared with the advantages resulting from the union of so large a body . Indeed , we are of opinion , that so long as the education given at these schools impresses boys with ...
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annual appear arithmetic attend beginner better Bible boys Breakfast British called Catechism child church common considered Construe and Parse crude form dative declension degree dialects dialects of Italy districts elementary English established evil examination Exercises expense explained feel fractions free-coloured French fund give given grammar Greek Greek language Hebrew language Herodotus Hurwitz Iliad infant instances instruction Italian Italian language King's scholars knowledge labour Latin learner lectures lesson master mathematics means ment Moses Stuart nature necessary nouns object observed Old Testament parents parish Penny Magazine persons present principles Private professors pupils question racter readers remarks root rules Sanskrit slaves Society Somers Town Sunday-school taught teachers teaching tense tion town Tuscan University Court verb verses vowel Westminster School whole number words writing καὶ
Populære avsnitt
Side 167 - Lords and commons of England, consider what nation it is whereof ye are, and whereof ye are the governors : a nation not slow and dull, but of a quick, ingenious, and piercing spirit, acute to invent, subtile and sinewy to discourse, not beneath the reach of any point the highest that human capacity can soar to.
Side 47 - Can any mortal mixture of earth's mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment ? Sure something holy lodges in that breast, And with these raptures moves the vocal air To testify his hidden residence.
Side 47 - In any right-angled triangle, the square which is described upon the side subtending the right angle, is equal to the squares described upon the sides which contain the right angle.
Side 51 - It shall support and train up young persons of both sexes for supplying properly instructed Teachers to the inhabitants of such places in the British dominions, at home and abroad, as shall be desirous of establishing schools on the British system...
Side 48 - If a straight line be divided into any two parts, the square on the whole line is equal to the squares on the two parts, together with twice the rectangle contained by the parts.
Side 101 - No person shall be received as a candidate without the consent of the Head of his College or Hall, or the consent of the Vicegerent in the absence of the said Head; and such consent, as well as the...
Side 366 - The fund called the SCHOOL FUND shall remain a perpetual fund, the interest of which shall be inviolably appropriated to the support and encouragement of the public or common schools throughout the State, and for the equal benefit of all the people thereof.
Side 321 - Every parent at all interested in his children must have felt the difficulty of providing suitable reading for them in their hours of amusement. This little work presents these advantages in a considerable degree, as it contains just that description of reading which will be beneficial to young children.
Side 51 - Writing, Arithmetic, and Needlework shall be taught ; the lessons for reading shall consist of extracts from the Holy Scriptures; no catechism or peculiar religious tenets shall be taught in the schools...
Side 47 - ... shall be equal to three given straight lines, but any two whatever of these must be greater than the third.