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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Page 17
... seem desirable to discuss under these several heads . There only now remains to mention the assistance rendered to Oriental studies by the Universities and learned societies of Europe , who , in addition to the interest with which they ...
... seem desirable to discuss under these several heads . There only now remains to mention the assistance rendered to Oriental studies by the Universities and learned societies of Europe , who , in addition to the interest with which they ...
Page 20
... seem to be one of the earliest members of the wide - spread Semitic family . Educated Europe was very slow to admit the genuineness of Cuneiform decipherment . It was asserted at first as a well - known axiom , that it was impossible to ...
... seem to be one of the earliest members of the wide - spread Semitic family . Educated Europe was very slow to admit the genuineness of Cuneiform decipherment . It was asserted at first as a well - known axiom , that it was impossible to ...
Page 27
... seems to have arisen from a notion in his mind that because every proposition implies a verb , it must explicitly exhibit one . Hence , chap . v . § 17 , he talks of a passage where anaku is " used as a verb , there being no other in ...
... seems to have arisen from a notion in his mind that because every proposition implies a verb , it must explicitly exhibit one . Hence , chap . v . § 17 , he talks of a passage where anaku is " used as a verb , there being no other in ...
Page 30
... seems pretty certain , on account of the general resemblance of the whole Æthiopic perfect to the same tense in the cognates , both in form and in prin- 2 1 In Mr. Sayce's Principles of Comparative Philology , p . 87 ( Trübner , 1874 ) ...
... seems pretty certain , on account of the general resemblance of the whole Æthiopic perfect to the same tense in the cognates , both in form and in prin- 2 1 In Mr. Sayce's Principles of Comparative Philology , p . 87 ( Trübner , 1874 ) ...
Page 31
... seems not to be borne out by the editions . Yet one would think that unless the word had stood " , the punctua- tors would hardly have felt compelled to treat it as other than a Perfect . is the only instance which the preformative ...
... seems not to be borne out by the editions . Yet one would think that unless the word had stood " , the punctua- tors would hardly have felt compelled to treat it as other than a Perfect . is the only instance which the preformative ...
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Common terms and phrases
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
Popular passages
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