1. IT would be foreign to the plan of this work to enter into details respecting the invention of the steam-engine, or to describe the gradual improvements which it has subsequently undergone; * a brief notice only will On Naval Warfare with Steam ... - Seite 21von Sir Howard Douglas - 1860 - 175 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Samuel Vince - 1812 - 140 Seiten
...respect to it's moisture. Various other contrivances, upon the same principle, have been invented, but it would be foreign to the plan of this Work to enter into a particular description of every instrument which has been constructed for this purpose. (165.) Mr.... | |
| John Ayrton Paris, John Samuel Martin Fonblanque - 1823 - 556 Seiten
...apparently incompatible with each other, may be commanded by the same substance, in a different dose. It would be foreign to the plan of this work to enter into a physiological inquiry into the modus operandi of these extraordinary agents; and the author relinquishes... | |
| Richard Godson - 1840 - 656 Seiten
...Stationers' Company, the uncertainty of the decisions of the courts, and the usurpation of the Crown. It would be foreign to the plan of this work, to enter into a discussion to shew whether copyright existed at common law ; upon that topic the most learned men... | |
| Sir Howard Douglas - 1858 - 196 Seiten
...INDEX . 149 NAVAL WAKFARE WITH STEAM. SECTION I. ON THE APPLICATION OF STEAM POWEE TO SHIPS OF WAR. 1. IT would be foreign to the plan of this work to...subsequently undergone;" a brief notice only will be given of the several steps by which it has been rendered applicable to the purposes of navigation.... | |
| John Adams Tarbell - 1866 - 392 Seiten
...be judiciously conducted except by those who have had much experience in the management of diseases, it would be foreign to the plan of this work to enter into all the details respecting it. Its chief varieties will therefore be merely referred to, and the important... | |
| John Adams Tarbell - 1866 - 396 Seiten
...judiciously conducted except by those who have had nrach experience in the management of diseases, it would be foreign to the plan of this work to enter into all the details respecting it. Its chief varieties will therefore be merely referred to, and the important... | |
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