Champs masqués
Livres Livres
" ... names both for things and for actions; as it has happened in every country, that I can recollect, where the conquerors have not preserved their own tongue unmixed... "
The Works of Sir William Jones: With the Life of the Author - Page 33
de John Shore Baron Teignmouth - 1807
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Asiatic Researches, Volume 1

Asiatick Society (Calcutta, India) - 1801 - 580 pages
...and regimen of verbs, differed as widely from both thofe tongues, as Arabick differs from Persian, or German from Greek. Now the general effect of conqueft...actions; as it has happened in every country, that I can recolleft, where the conquerors have not preferved their own tongue unmixed with that of the natives,...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Discourses delivered before the Asiatic society: and miscellaneous papers on ...

Sir William Jones - 1824 - 336 pages
...those tongues, as Arabic differs from Persian, or German from Greek. Now the general effect of conquest is to leave the current language of the conquered...altered, in its groundwork, but to blend with it a considerable number of exotic names bolh for things and for actions; as it has happened in every country,...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Discourses Delivered Before the Asiatic Society: And Miscellaneous Papers ...

Sir William Jones - 1824 - 356 pages
...German from Greek. Now the general effect of conqnest is to leave the current language of the conqnered people unchanged, or very little altered, in its groundwork, but to blend with it a considerable Dumber of exotic names bolh for things and for actions; as it has happened in every country,...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, Volume 3

Dugald Stewart - 1827 - 414 pages
...tongues, as Arabic differs from Persian, or German from Greek. Now, the " general effect of conquest is to leave the current language of the conquered...altered in its ground-work, but to blend with it " a considerable number of exotic names, both for things and for actions ; as it " has happened in every...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

The Works of Dugald Stewart: Elements of the philosophy of the human mind ...

Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 524 pages
...tongues, as Arabic differs from Persian, or German from Greek. Now, the general effect of conquest is to leave the current language of the conquered...altered in its ground-work, but to blend with it a considerable number of exotic names, both for things and for actions ; as it has happened in every...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Lectures on the Study of Language

Hanns Oertel - 1901 - 370 pages
...German from Greek. Now the general effect of conquest is to leave the current language of the conqucred people unchanged, or very little altered in its groundwork, but to blend with it a considerable number of exotick names both for things and for actions ; as it has happened in every...
Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre

Classics in Linguistics

Donald E. Hayden, E. Paul Alworth, Gary Tate - 1967 - 392 pages
[ Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions. ]
Affichage d'extraits - À propos de ce livre

A Reader in Nineteenth-century Historical Indo-European Linguistics

Winfred P. Lehmann - 1967 - 288 pages
[ Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions. ]
Affichage d'extraits - À propos de ce livre

“The” Collected Works of Sir William Jones, Volume 3

William Jones - 1993 - 474 pages
...and regimen of verbs, differed as widely from both thofe tongues, as Arabick differs from Perfian, or German from Greek. Now the general effect of conqueft...; as it has happened in every country, that I can recolletl, where the conquerors have not preferved their own tongue unmixed with that of the natives,...
Aperçu limité - À propos de ce livre

Sprachtheorien der Neuzeit, Volume 2

Peter Schmitter - 1996 - 510 pages
...tongues, äs Arabic differs from Persian, or German from Greek. Now the general effect of conquest is to leave the current language of the conquered...altered, in its groundwork, but to blend with it a considerable number of exotic names both for things and for actions; äs it has happened in every country,...
Aperçu limité - À propos de ce livre




  1. Ma bibliothèque
  2. Aide
  3. Recherche Avancée de Livres
  4. Télécharger l'ePub
  5. Télécharger le PDF