In Australian, where it is wanting at all, it is wanting in toto: and this is a reason for believing that its absence is referrible to non-development rather than to displacement.
So does Dionysius Periegetes; indeed the three accounts seem all referrible to one source.
For if each of the useful arts have its own proper origin, referrible to some particular place, time, and community, there must have been an era when it was wanting to mankind.
Some of the statements which are not common to him and Caesar, are undoubtedly referrible to the information which the conquest of Britain under Claudius supplied.
At the same time, the fact that all the occupants of the British Islands are referrible to the great Keltic stock, implies the likelihood of these differences lying within a comparatively small compass.
But a stainless life is more miraculous and Divine than the casting out of devils; it is more unknown in the world, referrible to no freak of nature, accomplished by no sleight of hand or jugglery, but due only to the presence of God.
Rhus Bucki-Amelam is common here, an Oxalis occurs in very shady places with fleshy leaves, it is so large that it is scarcely referrible to O.
Of course if they be opposed, the perianth will be referrible to a calyx if not to a corolla.
Therefore the cause of the phenomenon of transpiration seems to be referrible entirely to physical agents.
His organization affords him no shelter from the operations of physical laws beyond that of brutes; but the superiority of his nature may be supposed to modify their influence from causes referrible to his sensibility.
Properly speaking, the asphyxy comes on the instant the air is excluded, the shades of difference in the colour of the blood being referribleto the air left in the lungs after cessation of respiration.
The whole number of books that had issued from the press in Italy at the close of that year amounts, according to Panzer, to eighty-two; exclusive of those which have no date, some of which may be referrible to this period.
A change in the character of French poetry, about the commencement of this period, is referrible to the general revolution of literature.
Luca di Borgo perceived, in a certain sense, the application of algebra to geometry, observing, that the rules as to surd roots are referrible to incommensurable magnitudes.
Galvani, be referrible to any known law of nature, or if it be itself a new law.
Are the Phenomena, exhibited by the Application of certain different Metals to Animals, referrible to Electricity?
Thus it is barely possible that the action of Opium in causing congestion of the brain may be in part referrible to the influence of those excrementitious matters which it hinders from passing out through the intestinal glands (p.
These various symptoms are all brought about by Sedative medicines, but in each case the first effect is referrible to a derangement, the second to a loss of nervous power.
Laying these two languages aside, and reserving the Blackfoot for future inquiries, the other vocabularies are referrible to two recognized groups.
In Australian, where it is wanting at all, it is wanting in toto: and this is a reason for believing that its absence is referrible to non-development rather than to displacement.
The maclurites belonging to the same species, with specimens from Lakes Erie and Huron, and also from Igloolik, are perhaps referrible to the Maclurea magna of Le Sueur.
It contains sulphate of barytes, and is probably referrible to some of the Oolites near the Oxford clay.
Its crystalline forms are very numerous, and are referrible to the octahedron, and the pyramidal prism.
Many of them are plainly referrible to particular manipulations, or at most to limited subjects of chemical theory.
The intrinsic beauty of their motions is exclusively referrible to sensations in the ocular muscles of the observer, while the gracefulness of human motions is referrible in part to these, and in part to sensations in other muscles.
It would be foreign to the subject of the present memoir, to consider the beauty of expression of the human countenance; although this species of beauty is in a great degree referrible to muscular action.
Sternberg, are no doubt referrible to this epoch, according to the nature of these plants.
The cases referrible to this head may be ranged under two sections according as the increase is due to plurality of ordinarily single organs, or to an increase in the number of verticils or whorls.
In this instance, therefore, the doubling is distinctly referrible to an absolute increase in the number of whorls, and not to chorisis.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "referrible" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.