12 books found
by Sons of the American Revolution. General David Humphreys Branch
1911
by Robert Jamieson, Andrew Robert Fausset, David Brown
1876
by David Rhoads, Troy W. Martin
2025 · Wipf and Stock Publishers
The study presents a model/teaching tool for a comprehensive step-by-step linguistic analysis of passages of the Greek New Testament. The book illustrates the method with a thorough analysis of all words in six passages covering chapter one of the Gospel of Mark: kind of word, full grammatical identification, possible syntactical functions, semantic meanings, and linguistic comments. The repeated steps of analysis suggest an order in which such a process can work best. The process also provides word fields, structural dynamics, and parallel patterns. The approach seeks to fill the gap between the plain Greek text as it stands before us and the work of interpretation. Students, teachers, and scholars will find this to be a foundational work for analyzing the Greek New Testament.
by David Webster Hoyt
1871 · Providence [R.I.] : Printed for the author by the Providence Press
by Daniel David Dantzler
1899
Harry Dantzler and his sons, Jacob, Daniel and Henry, emigrated from Germany to Orangeburg County, South Carolina about 1739. Descendants lived in South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama and elsewhere.
by Nebraska. Supreme Court, Lorenzo Crounse, Guy Ashton Brown, Walter Albert Leese, David Allen Campbell, Lee Herdmen, Henry Paxon Stoddart
1886
"Rules of the Supreme Court. In force February 1, 1914": v. 94, p. vii-xx.
by David Hermon Van Hoosear
1902
A Mr. Van Hoosear was probably born in Holland before 1736, and immi- grated in the late 1750s or early 1760s to the south side of Long Island, New York. His only son, Rinear Van Hoosear (ca. 1756/1757- 1819), was born in Holland, served in the Revolutionary War, and married Mercy (Marcy?) Taylor in 1782. They lived in Connecticut, in New York, and finally in Wilton, Connecticut. Descendants and relatives lived in New England, New York and elsewhere. The introduction discusses and rejects the oft-stated belief that the Van Hoosear family are descendants of the Van Hoesen of The Netherlands.