Lexicographical Neighbors of Sequencies
Literary usage of Sequencies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sir Thomas Browne's Works: Including His Life and Correspondence by Thomas Browne, Simon Wilkin (1835)
"But the most usual incon- sequencies are from particulars, from negatives, and
from affirmative conclusions in the second figure, wherein, indeed, ..."
2. Old and New by Edward Everett Hale (1873)
"... ia spite of themselves, words denoting not simply sequencies but energies
continually occur in their writings. Indeed, the whole literature of science ..."
3. The Biblical Repository and Classical Review. by American Biblical Repository (1838)
"... one than in the other ; and no more of sequency in the one than in the other,
ie both are sequencies in respect to time and in the ideas of the writer. ..."
4. The British Critic: A New Review (1814)
"... and visible operations, and thus to become acquainted Muh the connection
a.id sequencies which subsist among the phenomena which meet his observation. ..."
5. The Chinese Recorder and Missionary Journal (1899)
"... the warrior in his warfare, and the martyr in his witness-bearing amid sequencies
of imprisonment and torture, of sword and flame. ..."
6. Publications by Cambridge Historical Society (Mass.) (1910)
"The Law (says he) which shortens Credit happens to be ill tim'd, and could the
Government have foreseen the fatal Con- sequencies that daily attend it, ..."
7. Genetic Manipulation in Crops: Proceedings of the International Symposium on by International Rice Research Institute (1988)
"... Legumin When restricted pea genomic DNA is probed with legumin cDNAs, four
major and several minor different legumin gene sequencies can be resolved. ..."
8. Transactions of the ... Session of the American Institute of Homœopathy by American Institute of Homeopathy Session (1900)
"The sequencies of this position are as follows : head at the brim, legs down; at
the outlet, legs up; when head is about to pass perineum, legs pendant. ..."