An act which hoisted the imperial and colonial authorities and their native cronies to landlords; whereas, consigning the native Africans of North Kavirondo to a class of squatter or tenant denizens on their own lands, a feat that tradition obliged be met with perspicuous contemptuous resistance.
"But because of robust consumer spending, GDP growth during the third quarter doesn't appear to have differed much from the 3.3 percent pace of the second quarter, and the perspicuous third-quarter inventory drag implies a rather hefty gain in real final sales.
14.
The authors, as native Hindu scholars, are certainly possessed of a deep erudition in Hindu literature, but they display a lack of training in the modern methods of philological and historical criticism, which deficiency is still enhanced by a too perspicuous bias and a tendency towards exaggerating the achievements of the Hindu race.
15.
Indeed [ it ] is arranged in so clear and perspicuous a manner, is so abundant in facts and philosophical reasoning, and displays such depth of research, as will, we think, establish his character as the first botanist of the age . " However, Brown's use of the Natural System was regretted.
16.
The link with Lansdowne led Baring to the Commons in 1784 when, at a cost of ?000, he was elected MP for House of Commons ( Barings archives, Northbrook MSS, N4.4 . 295 ), his speeches were reckoned to be neat, flowing and perspicuous, aiming more by solidity of argument to arrest and convince his hearers, than by beautiful figures and impassioned eloquence to mislead the minds of men ( Daily Advertiser, Oracle and True Briton, 12 Oct 1805 ).
17.
She conducted a detailed textual criticism of Thomas S . Kuhn's book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions ( 1962 ), characterizing the book as " at once scientifically perspicuous and philosophically obscure . " Masterman praised Kuhn as " one of the outstanding philosophers of science of our time " and his concept of paradigms as " a fundamental idea and a new one in the philosophy of science . " She criticised Thomas Kuhn for his vague and inconsistent use of the concept " Paradigm, " noting that it is used in at least 21 different senses, which can be summarized in three groups : metaparadigms, sociological paradigms, and artefact or construct paradigms.
18.
Other grammarians have supported the practice by analogy with Latin, such as Robert Lowth, who used the construction when he wrote in his 1762 textbook " A Short Introduction to English Grammar " that it was more suitable for informal than for formal English : " This is an Idiom which our language is strongly inclined to; it prevails in common conversation, and suits very well with the familiar style in writing; but the placing of the Preposition before the Relative is more graceful, as well as more perspicuous; and agrees much better with the solemn and elevated Style . " The proscription is still taught in schools at the beginning of the 21st century.
19.
They contain not only a clear statement of the English law, with all the alterations that have taken place since the time of Blackstone, but a full account of the main principles of Equity, ( a topic on which the English Commentator is confessedly deficient; ) also, a review of the modifications engrafted on the English law by the different States of the Union-and on all important questions, an instructive parallel between the English, American, Modern Continental, and Civil Laws . " Mr . Manning also remarks of the Commentaries, that " They are fine examples of lucid and manly reasoning, and the style in which they are written is perspicuous and forcible.
20.
Lord Kenyon, in alluding to a position in the Digest, says-Comyns " has not indeed cited any authority for this opinion, but his opinion alone is of great authority, since he was considered by his contemporaries as the most able lawyer in Westminster Hall . " Chief Justice Best also remarks, upon citing Comyns : " This he lays down on his own authority, without referring to any case; and I am warranted in saying, we cannot have a better authority than that learned writer . " For its exact and methodical analysis, for the succinct, perspicuous, and compressed form in which the Cases are stated, Comyns'Digest stands unrivalled in the annals of the law.