We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of many manuscripts in English
We have no meanings for "many manuscripts" in our records yet.
Usage of many manuscripts in English
1
Every editor daily receives manymanuscripts submitted by writers on their own initiative.
2
Nothing like it exists among my manymanuscripts of his.
3
You see-thereare so manymanuscripts.
4
At his death he left only twenty-two crowns, the dress he wore, two shirts, a few books, and manymanuscripts.
5
Byron reached England with fragments of marbles, skulls, pictures, shells, spears, guns, curios beyond count, and manymanuscripts in process.
6
In manymanuscripts, the oldest Greek included, the epistle to the Hebrews stands after 2 Thessalonians, immediately before the pastoral epistles.
7
The last publisher said it would take a month; they had manymanuscripts on hand, and could not do any better.
8
How manymanuscripts she burns, I know not; but the comparatively small number of pages that reach the world are nearly fleckless.
9
Textes inédits (Paris, 1948), which offers some of the manymanuscripts in which important ideas remained hidden for a long time.
10
The legend of Saint Bonaventure was spread everywhere, as soon as it appeared, and was everywhere highly approved: there are manymanuscripts of it.
11
In England there exist manymanuscripts of the first three books, called "Musica Ecclesiastica," frequently ascribed to the English mystic Walter Hilton.
12
I am, as perhaps you know, connected with the --Magazine, and this is one of the manymanuscripts that reach our office every day.
13
And the latter part of the last chapter of that in manyManuscripts it is found omitted.
14
"How manymanuscripts do you have?" I asked, surprised.
15
1-8, with which manymanuscripts terminate.
16
Manymanuscripts of the "Ecclesiastical History" contain a letter by one Cuthbert to his fellow-student Cuthwine, describing the manner of Bede's death.