Journal of School Geography, Bind 2Hammett, 1898 |
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Side iii
... Atlantic Coast and its Lighthouses , R. E. Dodge , 62 . Atlantic Coast , Navigable Rivers of the , ( note ) , 314 . Atmosphere , The Story of the , D. Archibald , ( review ) , 359 . Australasia , Its Geography , Resources , Commerce ...
... Atlantic Coast and its Lighthouses , R. E. Dodge , 62 . Atlantic Coast , Navigable Rivers of the , ( note ) , 314 . Atmosphere , The Story of the , D. Archibald , ( review ) , 359 . Australasia , Its Geography , Resources , Commerce ...
Side iv
... Atlantic Coast and Its Lighthouses , 62 ; First Steps in the Geography of the World , 92 ; Social Function of Geography , 328 . Diller , J. S. , Caldera , ( note ) , 115 . Ecuador , ( note ) , 78 . England and Wales , Geological Map of ...
... Atlantic Coast and Its Lighthouses , 62 ; First Steps in the Geography of the World , 92 ; Social Function of Geography , 328 . Diller , J. S. , Caldera , ( note ) , 115 . Ecuador , ( note ) , 78 . England and Wales , Geological Map of ...
Side v
... Atlantic Coast and its , R. E. Dodge , 62 . Lima , Peru , Some Notes Concerning , ( note ) , 349 . Literature , Current , 119 , 160 , 200 , 239 , 279 , 320 , 360 , 400 . Lyde , L. W. , A Syllabus of Geography , 227 . Mammals ...
... Atlantic Coast and its , R. E. Dodge , 62 . Lima , Peru , Some Notes Concerning , ( note ) , 349 . Literature , Current , 119 , 160 , 200 , 239 , 279 , 320 , 360 , 400 . Lyde , L. W. , A Syllabus of Geography , 227 . Mammals ...
Side vi
... Atlantic Coast , Navigable , ( note ) , 314 . Rouen , Commercial Conditions at , ( note ) , 234 . Russian Coasting Trade , The , ( note ) , 36 . Saint Christopher , The Salt Industry of , ( note ) , 155 . Samoa , Some Things About ...
... Atlantic Coast , Navigable , ( note ) , 314 . Rouen , Commercial Conditions at , ( note ) , 234 . Russian Coasting Trade , The , ( note ) , 36 . Saint Christopher , The Salt Industry of , ( note ) , 155 . Samoa , Some Things About ...
Side 9
... Atlantic coast , and whose blunted apex rests upon the summit of the Blue Ridge , 300 miles to the northwest . The sides of the triangle are closed in by North Carolina on the one hand , and Georgia on the other . Estimates of the area ...
... Atlantic coast , and whose blunted apex rests upon the summit of the Blue Ridge , 300 miles to the northwest . The sides of the triangle are closed in by North Carolina on the one hand , and Georgia on the other . Estimates of the area ...
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Aconcagua Africa Atlantic atmosphere basin belt British Cape central cents climate coast line coastal plain continent contour contour lines course crater district earth east eastern elementary elevation Europe fact Falkland Islands feet Geological glaciers granite harbor height Highlands hills horse latitude illustrations important inches islands isothermals Ixtaccihuatl JOURNAL OF SCHOOL lake land latitude lessons low pressure low pressure area miles moraine Moray Firth mountains natural northern observations ocean physical geography piedmont piedmont plateau planetary habit plants plateau Popocatepetl ports prevailing province pupils railway rain rainfall region rise river rocks SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY sheets shore side slopes soil South America southeast southern square miles Strait of Magellan streams surface teacher teaching temperature tide tion trade United valleys vegetation volcano waves weather western winds winter York
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Side 81 - The true sound of the word as locally pronounced will be taken as the basis of the spelling. 4. An approximation, however, to the sound is alone aimed at. A system which would attempt to represent the more delicate inflections of sound and accent would be so complicated as only to defeat itself.
Side 83 - ... is the sound of the two Italian vowels, but is frequently slurred over, when it is scarcely to be distinguished from ei in the English eight or ey in the English they.
Side 82 - One accent only is used, the acute, to denote the syllable on which stress is laid. This is very important, as the sounds of many names are entirely altered by the misplacement of this
Side 293 - Gavel, or Scawfell ; or, rather, let us suppose our station to be a cloud hanging midway between those two mountains, at not more than half a mile's distance from the summit of each, and not many yards above their highest elevation ; we shall then see stretched at our feet a number of valleys, not fewer than eight, diverging from the point, on which we are supposed to stand, like spokes from the nave of a wheel.
Side 391 - Philippines for the ten years ended 1897, amounting to 6,528,965 bales (914,055 tons), 41 per cent went to the United States. During the same years the Philippine Islands exported to the United States and to Europe 1,582,904 tons of sugar, of which 875,150 tons went to the United States, 666,391 tons to Great Britain, and 41,362 tons to continental Europe; showing that of the total exports more than 55 per cent went to the United States...
Side 81 - Mecca, &c., will be retained in their present form. 3. The true sound of the word as locally pronounced will be taken as the basis of the spelling.
Side 84 - As in English. has two separate sounds, the one hard as in the English word finger, the other as in singer. As these two sounds are rarely employed in the same locality, no attempt is made to distinguish between them. As in English. should never be employed ; qu is given as kw As in English.
Side 84 - Accents should not generally be used, but where there is a very decided emphatic syllable or stress, which affects the sound of the word, it should be marked by an acute accent.
Side 364 - Society, 1898), in speaking of the temperature during the winter months, says : — " It follows that where a winter climate is sought, offering, in the highest degree anywhere afforded by the British Islands, the combined qualities of mildness and dryness, such a climate is to be found on the shores of the Channel, from about Dover to Portland. To the west of Portland, and round the coast to Clifton, a higher temperature may be had, but the rainfall is greater, the climate damper, and raw weather...
Side 292 - I know not how to give the reader a distinct image of these more readily, than by requesting him to place himself with me, in imagination, upon some given point; let it be the top of either of the mountains, Great Gavel, or Scawfell; or, rather, let us suppose our station to be a cloud hanging midway between those two mountains, at not more than half a mile's distance from the summit of each, and not many yards above their highest elevation ; we shall then see stretched at our feet a number of...