Used to refer to cited works.
1There is also a reference to security costs at Oxegens passim.
2The Seventy in the former passage and the Vulgate passim take it for the diamond.
3Richard L. Rubenstein, After Auschwitz, Radical Theology and Contemporary Judaism (Indianapolis, 1966), passim.
4J.P. Sartre, The Psychology of the Imagination (London, 1972), passim.
5Bachofen, Das Mutterrecht; M'Lennan, Primitive Marriage, passim; Encycl.
6Enatum inde monumentum aere perennius, licet passim appareant sinistre dicta, minus perfecta, veritati non satis consentanea.
7Jasper, George Bell Bishop of Chichester (London, 1967), passim.
8Like in rap records passim, a recurring theme in Skepta's lyrics is not forgetting where he's from.
9Vide "Proceedings of the British Association for the Advancement of Science," 1859, and London Athenoeum, passim.
10Dallas from "Wiegmann's Archiv," 1863 (see also "Facts and Arguments for Darwin," passim, translated by W.S.
11But new facts (See the "Proceedings" of the Society for Psychical Research, London, passim, and especially Vols.
12Victims, likewise, are everywhere (passim) bought up; whereas, for some time, there were few to purchase them.
13Hammacher and Schlemmer, passim.
14See Haydon's Autobiography, 'passim.'
15Tom Swallow -These aversions to two-wordcollocations are all very well (Letters, passim) but are they clinically proven?
16Beekeepers in Coromandel and Wairarapa have linked the loss of hundreds of hives with the appearance of another bee parasite, Lotmaria passim.