Tipper, John, d. 1713.
Works from the collections
3 works
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- Online
The gentleman and lady's palladium for the year of Our Lord 1751 . Containing A royal-diary, or Ephemeris; new ænigmas, queries, mathematical questions, paradoxes, and answers to the last proprs'd; with an insallible receipt to make a modern mathematician. Original essays in prose and verse; pandæmon, on the Devil's wedding, a new cure for a scold, the ladies vindication, and letter form dagal hal-lagal, emperor of the moon, concerning the government of Jupiter the doctrine and application of morality. With which may he had a French almanack, vocabulary, and rudiments, to facilitate the knowledge of the French tongue. Of general use and enterainment, more especially for the instruction of youth. Being the third number publish'd of this kind. By the Author of The lady's diary.
Heath, Robert, d. 1779.Date: [1751]- E-books
- Online
The gentleman and lady's palladium for the year of Our Lord 1750 . Containing new ænigmas, queries, fables, tales, rebus's, epigrams, allusions, and eiptaphs; new arichmetical and mathematical questions and paradoxes, proposed in several branches of science. Also, answers to the last year's ænigmas, questions, queries, and paradoxes; a moral euclid, and improvements on Dr. Halley's astronomical tables, lately published. Of general use and entertainment; more especially for the instruction of youth. To which is added, A royal diary, or Ephemeris, with wonderful perdictions of furture events. By the Author of The ladies diary.
Heath, Robert, d. 1779.Date: [1750]- E-books
- Online
The gentleman and lady's palladium and diary, for the year of our Lord 1756. Containing, (besides what is usual,) many new improvements in science, on a plan quite new: particularly, perpetual astronomical and chronological tables; by which the moon's age, and place, for any month and day in the year for ever, are known at sight; and likewise the sun's place, time of high water at London, and moon's rising and setting for the same time. The discovery of the longitude, reduced to practice, by observation of the moon; according to the method first pointed out by the late celebrated astronomer royal, Dr. Edmund Halley. The eighth number published. Aut disce aut discere. - Humbly inscribed to the Royal Society. By the late author of The ladies diary.
Heath, Robert, d. 1779.Date: MDCCLVI. [1756]