Travels Through Turkey in Asia, the Holy Land, Arabia, Egypt and Other Parts of the World, Volume 1J. Newberry, 1767 - Arabian Peninsula |
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Page 1
... place. No sense of attachment and security is provided by a public place. In the concept of public place, no sense of belonging or familiar attributes are present. But Ruskin Bond presents railway station as a place of attachment and ...
... place. No sense of attachment and security is provided by a public place. In the concept of public place, no sense of belonging or familiar attributes are present. But Ruskin Bond presents railway station as a place of attachment and ...
Page
... place , primary county division , and other locational entity . There are now approximately 155,000 in- dividual entries in the files . The unique code consists of a two - digit ... place codes is smaller . Thus , place codes are nearly -4-
... place , primary county division , and other locational entity . There are now approximately 155,000 in- dividual entries in the files . The unique code consists of a two - digit ... place codes is smaller . Thus , place codes are nearly -4-
Page
... place or spot in that town, city, or state that matters. What is that place—the home you grew up in, the café you go to every day to do homework, a park in which you relax, the place you worship, your grandmother's house, or the place ...
... place or spot in that town, city, or state that matters. What is that place—the home you grew up in, the café you go to every day to do homework, a park in which you relax, the place you worship, your grandmother's house, or the place ...
Page 11
... place and the concept of community itself, however problematic. Constructing post-industrial communities: place, memory, and practice Though work on postindustrial spaces has focused largely on the process of “moving on” from the ...
... place and the concept of community itself, however problematic. Constructing post-industrial communities: place, memory, and practice Though work on postindustrial spaces has focused largely on the process of “moving on” from the ...
Page
How to Bridge the Chasms in our Communities Paul A. Hoffman. Defining “place” Let's imagine that each place is like a diamond. Every diamond has facets: “A facet is a flat surface on the geometric shape of the diamond. ... The facets are ...
How to Bridge the Chasms in our Communities Paul A. Hoffman. Defining “place” Let's imagine that each place is like a diamond. Every diamond has facets: “A facet is a flat surface on the geometric shape of the diamond. ... The facets are ...
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Travels Through Turkey in Asia, the Holy Land, Arabia, Egypt and Other Parts ... Charles Thompson No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
Affiftance Afia againſt Alexander alfo almoſt ancient becauſe befides Befiegers Benhadad built Caftle call'd called Caria caufed Chriftians Church City Coaft confiderable confifting Country Damafcus Diſtance Egypt Ephefus Euphrates faid fame fays feems feen fent ferve feven feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft firſt fituated fmall fome fometimes foon fquare ftands ftill fuch fufficient fuppofed fupported greateſt Greeks Hazael Hiftory himſelf Houfes Houſes hundred Ifland Ifrael Inhabitants itſelf Jerufalem King laft Libanus likewife Mafter Marble Maronites Mofque moft moſt Mountain Name Number obferved Occafion paffed Perfian Perfon Phoenicia Pillars Place Port prefent Prifon Prince Ptolemy Pythagoras raiſed Reaſon Refidence reft reprefented Rhodes Rhodians River Ruins Samaria Samos Scammony Scio ſeems ſeveral Side Sidon Sidonians Siege ſmall Smyrna Stone Strabo Syria Temple Teucer thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion Town Turkish Turks Tyre Tyrians ufually uſed Veffels vifit Village Walls Weft whereof whofe
Popular passages
Page 205 - Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon caused his army to serve a great service against Tyrus: every head was made bald, and every shoulder was peeled: yet had he no wages, nor his army, for Tyrus, for the service that he had served against it.
Page 155 - And a river went out of Eden to water the garden ; and from thence it was parted, and became into four heads.
Page 181 - Glafs of Sidon, the Purple of Tyre, and the exceeding fine Linen they wove, were the Product of their own Country, and their own Inventions: And...
Page 217 - Tyrians greatly confided ; and therefore, upon the rumour that he was to abandon them, they had recourfe even to chains, in order to prevent his departure^ but their utter ruin being already decreed by the true God, and foretold by his prophets, the confidence they placed in their idols could not avert the impending judgment. They were deftined to...
Page 199 - King Solomon to King Hiram, Greeting: "Be it known unto thee, O King, that my father David had it a long time in his mind to...
Page 215 - Befiegers, where it fluck fall, and gave the Tyrians an Opportunity either of plucking their Targets out of their Hands, and thereby leaving them expofed to Darts and Arrows ; or, if they did not readily part with their Shields, of pulling them headlong from the Towers. Some, by throwing large Nets over VOL.
Page 198 - Tyre was built by the Sidonians, two hundred and forty years before the building of the temple of Jerusalem : for this reason it is called by Isaiah, the Daughter of Sidon.
Page 160 - IT is certain that th,e Syrians were anciently governed by Heads of Families, who had the Title of Kings; and that they continued under the fame Government, in part, even to the Days of Saul, is plain from the Kings of Zobah, mentioned in Scripture* among the reft of his Enemies.
Page 212 - Sidon, because of the extreme narrowness of the entrance, and its being defended by a large number of galleys, all whose prows were turned towards the main ocean, he only sunk three of them, which lay without, and afterwards came to an anchor with his whole fleet, pretty near the mole, along the shore, where his ships rode in safety.
Page 203 - Elifa her demands ; which he foon repented ; for, as (he was aififted by her brother Barca, and feveral fenators, who were privy to her true defign, and engaged to follow her at all adventures; , her treafures were put on (hip-board, and the fleet out of fight, before Pygmalion was apprifed of her refolution. We are told, that, feeing himfelf thus deluded by a woman, and the vaft riches which he deemed already fecured in his own coffers, fnatched, by fuch a cunning device, out of his hands, he ordered...