| Joseph Priestley - 1783 - 650 pagina’s
...phrafe in the New Teftament is what may " be called its Handing fenfe, that which will be " the firft to occur to common people, of every " country, and in every age*." I would alfo refer you to a fmall piece 1 lately publifhed, entitled A general View of the Argumnti... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1783 - 658 pagina’s
...phrafe in the New Teftament is what may " be called its {landing fenfe, that which will be " the firft to occur to common people, of every " country, and in every age*." I would alfo refer you to a fmall piece 1 lately publifhed, entitled A general View of the Argumtnts... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1790 - 296 pagina’s
...the New Teftament is what may be " called " called its landing fenfe, that which will be the firft to " occur to common people, of every country, and in every "age." ' I would alfo refer you to a fmall piece I lately publifhed, ' entitled, A general View of the Arguments... | |
| James Gifford - 1815 - 328 pagina’s
...writer, " we cannot arrive at ab*.1 solute certainty in this great Point (the " that which will be the first to occur to common people, " of every country, and in every age." This is, without doubt, a good general rule : let it be applied, therefore, to the citations above,... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1815 - 526 pagina’s
...of any phrase in the New Testament is what may be called its standing sense, that which will be the first to occur to common people of every country and in every age*." I would also refer you to a small piece I lately published, entitled A general View of the Arguments... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1787 - 588 pagina’s
...New Testament is,, for the most part, what may be called its standing sense; that which will be the first to occur to common people of every country and in every age."* I would also refer you to a small piece I lately published, entitled, " A general View of the Arguments... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1790 - 620 pagina’s
...of any phrase in the New Testament is what may be called its standing sense, that which will be the first to occur to common people, of every country, and in every age.' " I would also refer you to a small piece I lately published, entitled, ' A general View of the Arguments... | |
| 1821 - 536 pagina’s
...Shepherd's preface to his Free Examination, &c." what may be called a standing sense: that which will be the first to occur to common people of every country,...the difference between this standing sense and the Jewisn sense will, in all cases, be far less than is imagined, or none at all; because, though different... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - 1826 - 596 pagina’s
...of any phrase in the \cw Testament is what may be called its standing sense, that which will bo the first to occur to common people of every country and in every age." — Horsley to Priestley, p. 23; Priestley's Letters to Horsley, p. 289. 14. In the twentieth chapter... | |
| Extracts - 1828 - 786 pagina’s
...phrase in the New Testament, is what may be called its standing sense: that which will be thefirst to occur to common people of every country and in every age. Dr. Horsley's Reply to Dr. Priestley. Since words are designed to convey some meaning, if we take the... | |
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