Transactions of the Second Session of the International Congress of Orientalists: Held in London in September, 1874Robert K. Douglas Trübner, 1876 - 456 pages |
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... months which have elapsed since the materials were first put into my hands for publication is no unprecedented interval . I am fully aware that much anxiety and some im- patience has been expressed at the delay which has thus.
... months which have elapsed since the materials were first put into my hands for publication is no unprecedented interval . I am fully aware that much anxiety and some im- patience has been expressed at the delay which has thus.
Page 7
... hand . Those divided by sounds will be united by numbers . The Presidents of the various Sections will deliver their inaugural addresses , after which the papers accepted will be read before these different Sections , and the verbal ...
... hand . Those divided by sounds will be united by numbers . The Presidents of the various Sections will deliver their inaugural addresses , after which the papers accepted will be read before these different Sections , and the verbal ...
Page 16
... hand , renders equal aid to the archæologist by deter- mining the relative age of different objects of antiquity . A Section of the Congress is devoted to Ethnology — that is , the consideration of the present actual condition of the ...
... hand , renders equal aid to the archæologist by deter- mining the relative age of different objects of antiquity . A Section of the Congress is devoted to Ethnology — that is , the consideration of the present actual condition of the ...
Page 27
... hands . Against this figment of a tense , foreign Cunealogists raised a protest , in which I am compelled in some measure to join . First , they ob- jected decidedly to the " restorations " ; next , they denied that sarraku was a verb ...
... hands . Against this figment of a tense , foreign Cunealogists raised a protest , in which I am compelled in some measure to join . First , they ob- jected decidedly to the " restorations " ; next , they denied that sarraku was a verb ...
Page 54
... hand , that the same habits have prevailed from the earliest times in Meso- potamia , Syria , and Arabia , without exciting any such influence on the Semitic dialects ; and wherever a Turanian people have found a permanent resting place ...
... hand , that the same habits have prevailed from the earliest times in Meso- potamia , Syria , and Arabia , without exciting any such influence on the Semitic dialects ; and wherever a Turanian people have found a permanent resting place ...
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Accadian ancient antiquity archæology Aryan Assyrian Bengal Bhikshus Bodhisatwa Bouddhisme Brahmans Buddha Buddhist called cave century character Chinese chinois cloth College Commentary compared Congress Crown 8vo Cuneiform d'une Demy 8vo dialects DICTIONARY dynasty East Edited Egypt Egyptian Elamite English ethnology Etruscan existence expression F. J. FURNIVALL fait Finnish Gautamiputra Glossary GRAMMAR Greek Hebrew Hindu Hungarian hymns India inscriptions Kâlidâsa King Kumârasambhava language late linguistic literature LL.D Max Müller means Median mesure Missionary monuments Nirvâna Oppert Oriental Orientalists origin Ostiak papyrus passage peuples Ph.D phonetic poems Prakrit present Prof Professor proverbs race Ragh Raghuvamsa Ramses religion Royal Asiatic Society Sâma Sanskrit scholars Section Semitic sewed suffix Sukot Susian Sûtra Tarom tchi texts tion town translation Turanian Veda Vedic verb viii Vogul vowels words
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