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This lively wordbook offers, in its current generation, lots of scholarship plus illuminating word histories and usage notes.
Theological wordbook of the Old Testament.
Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament, 2 vol., Moody Press, Chicago, 1980.
Trictionary (1982) is a 400-page trilingual English/Spanish/Chinese translation wordbook.
Why pay Houghton Mifflin, Mr. Newton suggested, when the two companies could build a wordbook of their own?
His Russian-Manchu wordbook of 1875 became one of the first Manchu dictionaries available in Europe at the time of its publication.
The Wiktionary uses English dictionary to define a few synonyms including lexicon, wordbook, vocabulary, thesaurus, and translating dictionary.
Folksingers Wordbook, (with Fred Silber); Music Sales Corporation (1973, reissued 2000)
Richard's discovery leads him to notice that the emblem on the machine is exactly the same as on a wordbook for translating the language of creation found earlier, only reversed.
Musicologist Anthony Hicks calls it "an unfortunate attempt to reconcile the autograph text with Arnold and the wordbook, the result being a composite version of no authority."
There are two 'editions' of the Fairy Queen wordbook, both quartos 'printed for Jacob Tonson': the first is dated 1692, the second 1693.
When William Barrow Kendall wrote his Furness Wordbook in 1867, he wrote that 'should never be dropped', suggesting the practice had already become conspicuous.
He wrote Thesaurus Linguae Romanae et Britannicae which was the first English-to-Latin wordbook.
The exact date of the premiere is unknown but the wordbook was advertised in The London Gazette from 4 June to 8 June 1691, suggesting a recent staging.
Moeru Eitango Moetan, also known as The Moetan Wordbook, is the first in the Moetan series, published in 2003.
Over the previous 150 years more than twenty dictionaries had been published in England, the oldest of these being a Latin-English "wordbook" by Sir Thomas Elyot published in 1538.
He also served as editor of The Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament and was a contributing editor to the Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible.
Life on Terra Nova Second Edition (September 1998), stock number DP9-102, ISBN 1-896776-40-X, updated wordbook with new material to reflect the events in Storyline Book 1.
Borrow visited the Romanichal Gypsy encampments in Wandsworth and Battersea, and wrote one more book, Romano Lavo-Lil, a wordbook of the Anglo-Romany dialect (1874).
R. Laird Harris, Gleason L. Archer, Bruce K. Waltke, eds., Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament (Chicago: Moody Press, 1980), 2444b, p. 950.
Some dictionaries such as Pocket Kenkyusha Japanese dictionary and Basic English writers' Japanese-English wordbook follow this style, and this is also used in the JSL form of romanization.
The Sailor's Wordbook , published more than a hundred years ago, offers this explanation: " 'Son of a gun' is an epithet conveying contempt in a slight degree and was originally applied to boys born afloat.
The English missionary Walter H. Medhurst, who never traveled to Japan, compiled the first bilingual wordbook An English and Japanese, and Japanese and English Vocabulary (Batavia, 1830).
Instead, he studied in great detail the meaning and background of New Testament Greek words, and prepared a wordbook that gave a few carefully chosen Marathi equivalents expressing different nuances of these Greek words.
Although it is conceivable that the writer had seen the show in 1692 or 1693, and recorded the actual running order in the annotation, it is much more probable that he merely 'corrected' the theatre score from the quarto wordbook.