A history of inventions and discoveries, tr. by W. Johnston. Vol. 1-3; 4, 2nd ed, 4. kötet1817 |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 40 találatból.
18. oldal
... glass , and which is composed of various metals com- bined with cobalt , but particularly iron , copper , arsenic , and perhaps also bismuth . It is hard , brittle , sonorous , and assumes a good polish , though it is not always of the ...
... glass , and which is composed of various metals com- bined with cobalt , but particularly iron , copper , arsenic , and perhaps also bismuth . It is hard , brittle , sonorous , and assumes a good polish , though it is not always of the ...
29. oldal
... glass or in golden vessels . But why does Pliny add : ideo album nulli rei sine mixtura utile ? In using these words , it is possible he may have alluded * Galenus de Antidotis , i . cap . 8 : recondi debent in vase stanneo , aut vitreo ...
... glass or in golden vessels . But why does Pliny add : ideo album nulli rei sine mixtura utile ? In using these words , it is possible he may have alluded * Galenus de Antidotis , i . cap . 8 : recondi debent in vase stanneo , aut vitreo ...
31. oldal
... hardly be right ; it ought to be : in glass , but not in leaden vessels ; for Dioscorides certainly must have known that quicksilver could not be kept in these metals . is found in his works alone . It is likewise TIN . TINNING . 31.
... hardly be right ; it ought to be : in glass , but not in leaden vessels ; for Dioscorides certainly must have known that quicksilver could not be kept in these metals . is found in his works alone . It is likewise TIN . TINNING . 31.
54. oldal
... glass making announces more than the art really performs . In our glass - houses glass is no more made than starch is by those who are called starch - makers . The latter only separate the starch from those parts with which nature had ...
... glass making announces more than the art really performs . In our glass - houses glass is no more made than starch is by those who are called starch - makers . The latter only separate the starch from those parts with which nature had ...
55. oldal
... glass which has lain for centuries in the earth or in the sea . That play of colours observed on the surface of glass , and which lessens its trans- parency , announces the commencement of efflo- rescence . Hence appears the reason why ...
... glass which has lain for centuries in the earth or in the sea . That play of colours observed on the surface of glass , and which lessens its trans- parency , announces the commencement of efflo- rescence . Hence appears the reason why ...
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
according acquainted ancients Apicius appears appellation Arrian assertion Avicenna beer belong Biblioth blanque Bologna Bologna stone cabbage called Cange cloth colour Columella conjecture Conrad Gesner cultivated Dioscorides doubt dresses Du Cange dyeing edition Einbeck emperor employed Encyclopédie England established fire forks formed France French fur clothing furs Geopon German Geschichte given gold Greeks gruit Hist hops hose Indicum indigo invention Italian Italy kind knit stockings known latter Lond loom lottery Lotto manner means mentioned metal mineralogists obtained occurs oldest opinion Paris passage perhaps period pieces piombino plants Plin Pliny plumbago present printed probable proof proved quæ quam quod quoted regard reign remark Romans sal ammoniac salt says seems silk sixteenth century skins speaks species stannum stone Strabo Suidas Theophrastus thing tion translation woad word writers δε
Népszerű szakaszok
393. oldal - The reason of this their curiosity is, because the Italian cannot by any means indure to have his dish touched with fingers, seeing all men's fingers are not alike cleane.
393. oldal - For while with their knife which they hold in one hand they cut the meate out of the dish, they fasten their forke which they hold in their other hand upon the same dish, so that whatsoever he be that sitting in the company of any others at...
108. oldal - French school of historical scholars, at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century...
394. oldal - Italian fashion by this forked cutting of meate, not only while I was in Italy, but also in Germany, and oftentimes in England since I came home. Being once quipped for that frequent using of my forke by a certain learned Gentleman, a familiar friend of mine, one Mr.
300. oldal - Priest, &c. ; with a Commentary, in which the antiquity of them is considered and defended by Jeremiah Milles, DD, Dean of Exeter.
394. oldal - I myself thought good to imitate the Italian fashion by this forked cutting of meat, not only while I was in Italy, but also in Germany, and oftentimes in England since I came home...
298. oldal - This information is confirmed by another account. It is related in Stow's Chronicle, that the earl of Pembroke was the first nobleman who wore worsted knit stockings. In the year 1564, William Rider, an apprentice of Master Thomas Burdet, having accidentally seen in the shop of an Italian merchant a pair of knit worsted stockings, procured from Mantua, and having borrowed them, made a pair exactly like them, and these were the first stockings knit in England of woollen yarn. From this testimony,...
142. oldal - Heennen, that indigo should be entirely banished from the empire, and that an exclusive privilege should be granted to those who dyed with woad. This was followed by an imperial prohibition on the 21st of April 1654, in which every thing ordered in regard to the devil's dyes is repeated, with this addition, that great care should be taken to prevent the private introduction of indigo, by which the trade in woad was lessened, dyed articles injured, and money carried out of the country.
59. oldal - Mox, ut est ingeniosa sollertia, non fuit contenta nitrum miscuisse, coeptus addi et magnes lapis, quoniam in se liquorem vitri quoque ut ferrum trahere creditur.
316. oldal - In the year 1589 the ingenious William Lee, Master of Arts, of St. John's College, Cambridge, devised this profitable art for stockings (but being despised went to France) ; yet of iron to himself, but to us and others of gold, in memory of whom this is here painted.