| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords, John Craigie, John Shaw Stewart, Thomas S. Paton - 1849 - 688 Seiten
...distinction between individuals of the human species is more discernible than in other animals. A man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two...there should be a likeness of features, there may be a discreminancy of voice, a difference in the gesture, the smile, and various other things, whereas a... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords, John Craigie, John Shaw Stewart, Thomas S. Paton - 1851 - 684 Seiten
...distinction between individuals of the human species is more discernible than in other animals. A man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two...there should be a likeness of features, there may be a discreminancy of voice, a difference in the gesture, the smile, and various other things, whereas a... | |
| Alfred Swaine Taylor - 1853 - 654 Seiten
...people before he sees two faces exactly alike, and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture, or other characters; whereas a family likeness... | |
| Alfred Swaine Taylor - 1856 - 744 Seiten
...people before he sees two faces exactly alike;,and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture, or other characters ; whereas a family-likeness... | |
| Alfred Swaine Taylor - 1856 - 868 Seiten
...people before he sees two faces exactly alike ; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture, or other characters; whereas a family-likeness... | |
| William Wills - 1857 - 296 Seiten
...distinction between individuals in the human species is more discernible than in other animals; a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike, and in an army of a hundred thousand men every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| Alfred Swaine Taylor - 1858 - 994 Seiten
...people before he sees two faces exactly alike ; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture, or other characters ; whereas a family likeness... | |
| Theodric Romeyn Beck - 1860 - 910 Seiten
...distinction between individuals in the human species is more discernible than in other animals; a man may survey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike ; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of features,... | |
| William Augustus Guy - 1861 - 624 Seiten
...always considered likenes* as an argument of a child's being the son of a parent. A man may §anrey ten thousand people before he sees two faces perfectly alike, and in an army of one hundred thousand men every one may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature,... | |
| Alfred Swaine Taylor - 1861 - 910 Seiten
...people before he sees two faces exactly alike; and in an army of a hundred thousand men, every man may be known from another. If there should be a likeness of feature, there may be a difference in the voice, gesture, or other characters ; whereas a family likeness... | |
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