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Etymologies
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Examples
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Altholz, Anatomy of a Controversy: The Debate over "Essays and Reviews" 1860-1864 Scolar, 1994.
Buying Books 2010
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Loades, p. 43 and G. Walker, Persuasive Fictions: Faction, Faith and Political Culture in the Reign of Henry VIII, [Scolar Press, 1996], p. 203 back
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But he finds Scolar stifling and wants to become a “Godhead” to the dismay of his wife and father in-law.
"Mirror Space - Sentients of Orion 3" by Marianne de Pierres (Reviewed by Liviu Suciu) Liviu 2009
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Moving on, Thales is a very intelligent and handsome young man on the so-called intellectual capital of the League, planet Scolar.
"Mirror Space - Sentients of Orion 3" by Marianne de Pierres (Reviewed by Liviu Suciu) Liviu 2009
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He is also completely impractical, living up to the Scolar reputation as a planet of “nerds”.
"Mirror Space - Sentients of Orion 3" by Marianne de Pierres (Reviewed by Liviu Suciu) Liviu 2009
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Streetperson interrupting the Scolar: What are the options to our existence?
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A Social History of "Gossip" in Working-Class Neighbourhoods, 1880-1960 (Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1995), 19-20.
Gutenber-e Help Page 2005
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Established publishers would not back him, so in 1966 he founded the Scolar Press and over the next seven years reproduced more than 2,000 such pre-1801 works.
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Note: The Scolar edition is a "hybrid" facsimile: it is neither a diplomatic facsimile of one copy nor an eclectic facsimile of an "ideal" copy.
Paradise Lost (1667) 1667
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Instead, the Scolar editors have reproduced a copy owned by the press, and the 85 times they came up against legibility problems with their copy, they substituted pages from five different copies held by the British Museum.
Paradise Lost (1667) 1667
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