Journal of the American Oriental Society, Volume 10American Oriental Society., 1880 "Proceedings" or "Select minutes of meetings" are included in each volume (except volumes 3, 12). |
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Page 42
... appear from beneath ; porapor , be in the habit of appearing ; kapo'rata , make appear , produce ; poreon , jump on , seize ; poretijoń , bow down from , do obeisance ; pora- por , feel , experience an emotion ; kaporapor , be ...
... appear from beneath ; porapor , be in the habit of appearing ; kapo'rata , make appear , produce ; poreon , jump on , seize ; poretijoń , bow down from , do obeisance ; pora- por , feel , experience an emotion ; kaporapor , be ...
Page 105
... appears to be closer than in most other dialects . The occasional intervention of the object between the verb and its directive makes strongly in favor of writing the latter separately . [ It is always so written in the Grammar , but we ...
... appears to be closer than in most other dialects . The occasional intervention of the object between the verb and its directive makes strongly in favor of writing the latter separately . [ It is always so written in the Grammar , but we ...
Page 113
... appears in the heavens : you will therefore always find me at dinner , and the oftener you favour me with your company , the more pleasure you will give to , My dear Sir , Your very faithful serv1 , W. JONES . VI . IN COURT , 14 April ...
... appears in the heavens : you will therefore always find me at dinner , and the oftener you favour me with your company , the more pleasure you will give to , My dear Sir , Your very faithful serv1 , W. JONES . VI . IN COURT , 14 April ...
Page 163
... appears capable of meaning only of the particle su , ' while it ought to mean after shu , when a particle , and so to read nipátát shvah . If the particle su in its unaltered form were given in the rule , it ought to be represented by ...
... appears capable of meaning only of the particle su , ' while it ought to mean after shu , when a particle , and so to read nipátát shvah . If the particle su in its unaltered form were given in the rule , it ought to be represented by ...
Page 166
... appears to be one other such case , at iv.39 ; see below ) , and it might be irregularly left uninflected though used in a genitive relation . But what to do with pra minanti besides I do not see , unless we may simply regard it as a ...
... appears to be one other such case , at iv.39 ; see below ) , and it might be irregularly left uninflected though used in a genitive relation . But what to do with pra minanti besides I do not see , unless we may simply regard it as a ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-declension a-stems accent ACCUSATIVE PLURAL ACCUSATIVE SINGULAR adverb aorist appears Atharvan B-forms barytone belong Benfey catalectic character Chinese compounds consonant copies Corresponding crasis Cypriote DATIVE declension dialects DUAL MASCULINE edition example EZRA ABBOT forms GENITIVE Grammar Greek Haven hymn imperative INDICATIVE indra inscription instances kirin language later LOCATIVE SINGULAR manuscript masc MASCULINE AND FEMININE MASCULINE AND NEUTER metre metrical Missionary nasal NEUTER NOMINATIVE AND ACCUSATIVE noun occurs optative original oxytone páda Pali participles passages peculiar perhaps person Plate PLURAL MASCULINE Ponape Prât present Prof pron pronoun redupl referred Rig-Veda root rule Sanskrit Sây Sing SINGULAR MASCULINE SINGULAR NEUTER Society STEMS IN RADICAL stone subjunctive Suffix syllables tás tion transition Transition-forms translation trishtubh Veda Vedic verb verse viii Vocabulary VOCATIVE VOCATIVE PLURAL vowel W. D. Whitney Whitney words
Popular passages
Page clxxxviii - Hindu Law. Principally with reference to such portions of it as concern the Administration of Justice in the Courts in India. By SIR THOMAS STRANGE, late Chief Justice of Madras. 2 vols.
Page cii - ... and originated and developed those phases of Japanese Buddhism, which have made it a distinct product of thought and life among the manifold phases of this, the most widely-professed religion on earth. This ecclesiastical literary activity and growth culminated in the sixteenth century. Since that time Japanese thought has been led by the Samurai, or military literati, the secularly educated and armed classes. The creative era of Japanese literature was between the eighth and twelfth centuries....
Page 200 - Nannul, Yapparungalam, and other native authorities, with commentary, copious exercises, and examples, taken from the best authors, and an analytical index, by the Rev. GU Pope, Head Master of the Ootacamund Grammar School.
Page cxxiv - Salisbury, in the chair. After the reading of the minutes of the last meeting, the report of the Treasurer was read, referred to an auditing Committee, audited, and accepted.
Page 197 - In the Sinaitic MS., in which there are four columns to a page, the Gospel of Mark ends on the second, and that of Luke begins on the third. The Vatican MS. has at the end of verse 8 the usual arabesque which is placed at the end of a book, and the subscription ката yiapuav.
Page ciii - The primary object that united and impelled them was to restore the Mikado ; their secondary bond of union and object was to drive out the foreigners, close the ports of foreign commerce, and repudiate the treaties. Mr. Iwakura and his colleagues were the arch-haters of foreigners, their ways and works. Now, they are the leaders of the new ideas and the forward movement in Western civilization. How was this marvelous change wrought ? Why did the foreigner-haters become the leaders of progress, the...
Page cxc - Twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth annual report to the council of the city of Manchester on the working of the Public Free Libraries.
Page 200 - A SHORT PRACTICAL GRAMMAR OF THE TIBETAN LANGUAGE, with special Reference to the Spoken Dialects.
Page 116 - The ships of this season will carry home seven hundred copies of our first volume of Transactions; and the second will be ready. I hope, next year...
Page 195 - B, though familiar with ia, and a few other of the most ordinary abbreviations, knows nothing of these compendia : which certainly cannot have existed in the earliest copies of all. Once more it seems reasonable to suppose that their constant occurrence in Cod. « indicates for that Codex a date subsequent to Cod. B.