Pantologia. A new (cabinet) cyclopædia, by J.M. Good, O. Gregory, and N. Bosworth assisted by other gentlemen of eminence, Volume 51813 |
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... grain . It is apt to purge horses a little on the first using of it ; they eat it greedily , and are fond of it : but , as it becomes very slippery from the mois- ture in the mouth , it is swallowed whole , and passed through the body ...
... grain . It is apt to purge horses a little on the first using of it ; they eat it greedily , and are fond of it : but , as it becomes very slippery from the mois- ture in the mouth , it is swallowed whole , and passed through the body ...
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... grain , & c . and their uses in the feeding of horses , Mr. Clark proceeds to consider how these are or ought to be applied to the greatest benefit . He quotes the count de Buffon ( vol . iii . page 375 ) , who asserts , " that the ...
... grain , & c . and their uses in the feeding of horses , Mr. Clark proceeds to consider how these are or ought to be applied to the greatest benefit . He quotes the count de Buffon ( vol . iii . page 375 ) , who asserts , " that the ...
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... grain at one time , but to give it them in small quantities , and repeat it the more frequently , spreading it carefully in the trough or manger . At the same time , they shew the propriety of mixing chopped straw or hay with the grain ...
... grain at one time , but to give it them in small quantities , and repeat it the more frequently , spreading it carefully in the trough or manger . At the same time , they shew the propriety of mixing chopped straw or hay with the grain ...
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... grain than the soil actually cultivated pro- duces , and where landed estates are perpetually flitting from hand to hand . The trees that answer best for fresh planta . tion are such as grow to a large size , and lofty height , whether ...
... grain than the soil actually cultivated pro- duces , and where landed estates are perpetually flitting from hand to hand . The trees that answer best for fresh planta . tion are such as grow to a large size , and lofty height , whether ...
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... grain : the workman then pro- ceeds to draw it out into pieces of about twenty- four inches in length , half an inch or more in breadth , and half an inch in thickness . These pieces , however , are not all of the same thickness , some ...
... grain : the workman then pro- ceeds to draw it out into pieces of about twenty- four inches in length , half an inch or more in breadth , and half an inch in thickness . These pieces , however , are not all of the same thickness , some ...
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acid ancient angles appear applied ball barrel Ben Jonson body borax botany called Calyx carbonic acid church circle colour common contained corol degree drupe Dryden earth employed equal feet fire flowers fluid fluxion force fore four French friction frustum furnace gallic acid gass genus given glanders glass globe glycine gold grains gravity greater Greek ground heat horses inches inhabitants iron kind language Latin length manner means melted ment mercury metal Milton motion mould muriatic acid nature nitric acid noun number of chances observed oxalic acid person piece plane plants Pope principal produced pronoun Prop proportion quantity ratio river Saxon Shak Shakspeare side solid species specific gravity Spenser straight line substance sulphuric sulphuric acid supposed surface Theor thing tion town trees velocity verb weight whole words