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Relative therefore to each case, there ought to be inserted in the<lb/> | Relative therefore to each case, there ought to be inserted in the<lb/> | ||
Index --1. <hi rend='superscript'>A</hi> As many Titles [points] as can be picked out of it:<lb/>2.<hi rend='superscript'><gap/><superscript text</hi> their respective Synonymas<sic>unusually-spelled text</sic>, where there are any.<lb/> | Index --1. <hi rend='superscript'>A</hi> As many Titles [points] as can be picked out of it:<lb/>2.<hi rend='superscript'><gap/><superscript text</hi> their respective Synonymas<sic>unusually-spelled text</sic>, where there are any.<lb/>With respect to<unclear>questionable reading</unclear> these last it is evident that it will not be necessa<lb/>ry <hi rend='superscript'><unclear>under each</unclear></hi>to insert <hi rend='superscript'>that part of the</hi>doctrine of the case which concerns it, but <unclear>index</unclear> one only for each <sic>groupe</sic>so as the rest be amply furnished with<lb/>references to conduct the reader to that one.<lb/>Many compilers have thought it sufficient if every Determination <hi rend='superscript'>case</hi><lb/>was placed under some one article of their own choosing:<lb/>while at the same time there might be twenty different accounts<lb/>upon which it might be material to a man to pursue that -- <lb/>same Determination <hi rend='superscript'>case</hi>; and consequently <hi rend='superscript'>accordingly</hi>just so many chances<lb/>against his succeeding in pitching in the first instance (if ever<lb/>at all) upon that individual one [the consideration] of] which <note><hi rend='superscript'>trd</hi>3 Privies -- 4<hi rend='superscript'>th</hi>.<lb/>Strangers</note><lb/>happened to have governed the arrangement.<p>paragraph</p>A single example will serve to <sic>shew</sic> the inconveniencies of too<lb/>concise an Index, in a work otherwise of acknowledged merit.<pb/> | ||
A Person in London as occasion to make an addition to<lb/>his House: he happens to hear that there are acts of Parlia<lb/>ment which lay him under certain restraints: [as with<lb/>resjpect to the Building of the Walls,] | |||
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Very different in this respect from the Text, of the indent to it
repetitions apart there cannot be too much. on the contrary the fuller
it is, the better is the Student eased — The more faces under
which an article is there presented; the more chance is there
for that being one of them under which it happens to present
itself to him: especially with regard to Students at their first
entrance into the Study, person not of the Profession (if
it is proposed they should have the means given them of know
ing any thing about the matter) who are often at a loss to
to know what other faces or relations it is susceptible of, besides
that particular one under which they chance at first to view it.
As the number with which he has at any time to do is always
the same, viz: one only: whether the others with which he has
nothing to do, be few or many makes no difference to him --
being led to it at once by the Alphabetical clue, without
---page break---
Relative therefore to each case, there ought to be inserted in the
Index --1. A As many Titles [points] as can be picked out of it:
2.<superscript text their respective Synonymasunusually-spelled text, where there are any.
With respect toquestionable reading these last it is evident that it will not be necessa
ry under eachto insert that part of thedoctrine of the case which concerns it, but index one only for each groupeso as the rest be amply furnished with
references to conduct the reader to that one.
Many compilers have thought it sufficient if every Determination case
was placed under some one article of their own choosing:
while at the same time there might be twenty different accounts
upon which it might be material to a man to pursue that --
same Determination case; and consequently accordinglyjust so many chances
against his succeeding in pitching in the first instance (if ever
at all) upon that individual one [the consideration] of] which trd3 Privies -- 4th.
Strangers
happened to have governed the arrangement.
paragraph
A single example will serve to shew the inconveniencies of too
concise an Index, in a work otherwise of acknowledged merit.
---page break---
A Person in London as occasion to make an addition to
his House: he happens to hear that there are acts of Parlia
ment which lay him under certain restraints: [as with
resjpect to the Building of the Walls,]
Identifier: | JB/070/135/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 70. |
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070 |
of laws in general |
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135 |
promulg. n. year books. indexes |
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001 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
1 |
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recto |
a1 |
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[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]] |
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23250 |
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