What vigor will it infuse into all thy graces and affections ! [adverb]
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Turning aside into the woods, he set about making an encampment with as much vigor as he could summon up. [noun]
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However, his healthy vigor kept him lingering for many days and nights. [noun]
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Though his adversary neglected the hills, he had planted his batteries with judgment on the plain, and caused them to be served with vigor and skill. [noun]
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The vigor of mind and body--our learned youth on one hand and strong-armed peasantry on the other--form the nucleus of our force. [noun]
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His conscience stood in inverse relation to the vigor of his body. [noun]
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There your regenerate soul will acquire new life and vigor; your enervated genius will recover unconquerable energy; and your heart, perhaps already withered, will be rejuvenated. [noun]
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Therefore the penal code--which much prefers intelligence to muscular vigor--has made, of the four varieties mentioned above, a second category, liable only to correctional, not to Ignominious, punishments. [noun]
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In our day, the robber--the warrior of the ancients--is pursued with the utmost vigor. [noun]
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Did he--by the efficacious virtue of the right of property, by this MORAL QUALITY infused into the soil--endow it with vigor and fertility. [noun]
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THE VIGOR OF WOMEN. [noun]
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