The most important adherent to Brown's system was J. RSschlaub (1768-1835) modified Brown's system into the theory of excitement (Erregungstheorie), which for a time was extremely popular in Germany. A great shock of rough, dusky, dark hair; bright, laughing, hazel eyes; massive aquiline face, most massive yet most delicate; of sallow brown complexion, almost Indian-looking, clothes cynically loose, free-and-easy, smokes infinite tobacco.

Something brown lunged from the brush near her face and she screamed, throwing herself back so hard she lost her balance and fell. With large, brown eyes and dark hair, she was toned and tall, a model's body with an extra layer of muscle. The definition of brown is something that is the color of mud, soil or dirt (a color made from mixing red, yellow and black), or someone who is sun-tanned or dark-skinned. Brown is the first investigator to determine the theoretical motions with this degree of precision; and he finds that there is no such divergence between the actual and the computed motion. 2.

English Sentences Focusing on Words and Their Word Families The Word "Crown" in Example Sentences Page 1. A coal of this kind is generally to be Lignite distinguished by its brown colour, either in mass or in the blacker varieties in the streak. Nickel with a potash-lead glass gives a violet colour, and a brown colour with a soda-lime glass. ; Then the crown must be set upon the head of the Dauphin, and he must be anointed as the king. There was a gentle air around the woman, and her large brown eyes lacked the rigid stoniness of her husband's.

The nest, contrary to the habits of most Limicolae, is generally placed under a ledge of rock which shelters the bird from observation,' and therein are laid four eggs, of a light olive-green, closely blotched with brown, and hardly to be mistaken for those of any other bird.

A few minutes later a brown LTD crept up the drive and stopped. The oldest rocks of Barbados, known as the Scotland series, are of shallow water origin, consisting of coarse grits, brown sandstones and sandy clays, in places saturated with petroleum and traversed by veins of manjak. Brown, John Hancock, His Book (Boston, 1898), a work consisting largely of extracts from Hancock's letters. The destruction of its forests has led to the loss of all its alluvial soil, and now it is for the most part a brown and barren rock, covered at best with scanty aromatic scrub, pastured by sheep and goats.

Placing a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, his long fingers then searched the pockets of his brown tweed jacket and finally emerged with a match. Mosses when growing in tufts should be gathered just before the capsules have become brown, divided into small flat portions, and pressed lightly in drying paper. Verdant forests stretched to the steely sky, a swath of green, brown, and grey. 'Out of the bosom of the air, Out of the cloud-folds of her garments shaken, Over the woodlands brown and bare, Over the harvest-fields forsaken, Silent, and soft, and slow Descends the snow.'.

It is a brown powder which on heating in air loses sulphur and leaves a residue of the disulphide. She was proud of it. She appeared to be in her early thirties, had chestnut brown hair that fell in soft waves around her shoulders with thin streaks of what looked like fire running through it.

The colour varies from earthy brown to blackish, and the greater part of the body is thinly covered with hair, and the ears and tail are fringed. The first sign of its presence is the appearance of a minute spot, which is greyish in the centre, with a brown border. These last have a white or reddish ground, with ornamentation in blue, red, brown or black, and are of much better manufacture than the modern pottery of the country. Iodine dissolves in an aqueous solution of the salt to form a dark brown liquid, which on evaporation over sulphuric acid gives black acicular crystals of the tri-iodide, K1 3.

The animal is ` brown,' of a shade from orange or tawny to quite blackish; the tail and feet are ordinarily the darkest, the head lightest, often quite whitish; the ears usually have a whitish rim, while on the throat there is usually a large tawny-yellowish or orange-brown patch, from the chin to the fore legs, sometimes entire, sometimes broken into a number of smaller, irregular blotches, sometimes wanting, sometimes prolonged on the whole under surface, when the animal is bicolor like a stoat in summer.