| Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology - 1891 - 530 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable or which could be much improved. But if names may...a fixed nomenclature would thereby be overthrown. The rule of priority has therefore been adopted. Permanent biologic nomenclature dates from the time... | |
| John Wesley Powell - 1891 - 610 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable or which could be much improved. But if names may...a fixed nomenclature would thereby be overthrown. The rule of priority has therefore been adopted. Permanent biologic nomenclature dates from the time... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of Ethnology - 1891 - 540 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable or which could be much improved. But if names may...a fixed nomenclature would thereby be overthrown. The rule of priority has therefore been adopted. Permanent biologic nomenclature dates from the time... | |
| 1891 - 536 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable or which could be much improved. But if names may...a fixed nomenclature would thereby be overthrown. The rule of priority has therefore been adopted. Permanent biologic nomenclature dates from the time... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - 1891 - 392 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable, or which could be much improved; but, if names may...may be wrought in this manner is unlimited, and such modiBcatioos would ultimately become equivalent to the introduction of new names, and a fixed nomenclature... | |
| Nathaniel Southgate Shaler - 1894 - 876 páginas
...the supposed constitution of things, as the fleshy, the woody, the rocky, the earthy, the water}'. Thus the number of genders may increase, while further...been deemed necessary to adopt the rule of priority. As there are many linguistic families in North America, in a number of which there are many tribes... | |
| Franz Boas - 1966 - 238 páginas
...priority it will occasionally happen that a name must be taken which is not wholly unobjectionable or which could be much improved. But if names may...a fixed nomenclature would thereby be. overthrown. The rule of priority has therefore been adopted. Permanent biologic nomenclature dates from the time... | |
| |