| United States. Bureau of Insular Affairs, Charles Edward Magoon - 1902 - 822 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient or useful or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...employing any means calculated to produce the end, and not aw being confined to those single means without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such... | |
| John Marshall - 1903 - 828 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient, or useful, or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single... | |
| Van Vechten Veeder - 1903 - 656 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient or useful or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single,... | |
| Alonzo Barton Hepburn - 1903 - 692 էջ
...true that this is the sense in which the word ' necessary ' is always used ? ********** "To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. *****•**•* " To have declared that the best means shall not be used, but those alone without which... | |
| John Marshall - 1903 - 832 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient, or useful, or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single... | |
| United States. Bureau of Insular Affairs, Charles Edward Magoon - 1903 - 808 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient or useful or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single... | |
| United States. Bureau of Insular Affairs, Charles Edward Magoon - 1903 - 832 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient or useful or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single... | |
| 1904 - 1072 էջ
...Wheat. 413, 4 L. ed. 603, it is said by Chief Justice Marshall, among other things, that to employ the means necessary to an end is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable; that it is essential to just construction that many words which import something excessive should be... | |
| John Marshall - 1905 - 518 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient, or useful, or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end, is generally understood...calculated to % * produce the end, and not as being con' fined to those single means, without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the... | |
| Frank Johnson Goodnow - 1906 - 268 էջ
...imports no more than that one thing is convenient, or useful, or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end, is generally understood...without which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language, that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single... | |
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