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