| Carl Paul Caspari - 1859 - 638 pages
...Persians change it into a common z. c, the Heb. y, is a strong (but to Europeans, as well as Turks and Persians, unpronounceable) guttural, related in...the breath. It is wrong to treat it, in any of the Shemitic languages, as a mere vowel -letter, or (worse still) as a nasal n or ng. c is a guttural g,... | |
| Carl Paul Caspari - 1859 - 286 pages
...Europeans, as d C- « well as Turks and Persians, unpronounceable) guttural, related in its nature to , with which it is sometimes confounded. It is described...the breath. It is wrong to treat it, in any of the Shemitic languages, as a mere vowel -letter, or (worse still) as a nasal n or ng, c is a guttural g,... | |
| John Thompson Platts - 1874 - 426 pages
...perhaps, the educated Musalman, it is pronounced like <-l>. c has a strong guttural sound, pronounced by a smart compression of the upper part of the wind-pipe, and forcible emission of the breath. Its correct pronunciation is rarely heard in India, and is scarcely to be acquired by a European. i... | |
| John Thompson Platts - 1894 - 366 pages
...; in Arabic, it is a ! ^* strongly articulated palatal 2. ./ fc ' in Arabic, is a strong guttural. It is described as produced by a smart compression...the windpipe and forcible emission of the breath. The Persians, however, make scarcely any distinction between it and the consonant 1 alif. It is simply... | |
| Leonard C. Smithers - 1894 - 450 pages
...this country, is used to represent the Arabic letter c in whose very name 'Ayn it occurs. The 'Ayn is " described as produced by a smart compression...upper part of the windpipe and forcible emission of breath," imparting a guttural tinge to a following or preceding vowel-sound ; but it is by no means... | |
| John Thompson Platts - 1909 - 426 pages
...perhnps, the educated Musalman, it is pronounced like i_l>. c has a strong guttural sound, pronounced by n smart compression of the upper part of the wind-pipe, and forcible emission of the breath. Its correct pronunciation is rarely heard in India, and is scarcely to be acquired by a European. i... | |
| Carl Paul Caspari - 1967 - 816 pages
...Europeans, as well as Turks and Persians, unpronounceable) guttural, related in its nature to »-, with which it is sometimes confounded. It is described...treat it, in any of the Semitic languages, as a mere vowel -letter, or (worse still) as D a nasal и or a;/. t is a guttural g, accompanied by a grating... | |
| 1891 - 576 pages
...Turks and Persians, unpronounceable) guttural, related in its nature to Jia, with which it is somtimes confounded. It is described as produced by a smart compression of the windpipe and forcible emission of the breath"; „sirve por a consonante tan blanda y tan sotil mente... | |
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