The Discovery of the Science of Languages: In which are Shown the Real Nature of the Parts of Speech, the Meaning which All Words Carry in Themselves, as Their Own Definitions, and the Origin of Words, Letters, Figures, Etc, Nide 2Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1844 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 95
Sivu 4
... allowed to have borrowed such a word , since they stood in need of it . Thus in our days there is in England a part of a man's dress called a Mackintosh ; and as Frenchmen have never hitherto had such a part of dress , they have been ...
... allowed to have borrowed such a word , since they stood in need of it . Thus in our days there is in England a part of a man's dress called a Mackintosh ; and as Frenchmen have never hitherto had such a part of dress , they have been ...
Sivu 13
... allow o to be for life , iv o vie , or vie o vie will mean " the life life . " From the womb being the place of generation , this meaning of all life is very appropriate as applied to such a word . Then from womb and woman being the ...
... allow o to be for life , iv o vie , or vie o vie will mean " the life life . " From the womb being the place of generation , this meaning of all life is very appropriate as applied to such a word . Then from womb and woman being the ...
Sivu 18
... allowed to approach , as if thus , from their being composed of two , to indicate a plural number . In writing , this limited meaning of the u was signified by its taking an n after it , as un , which means u , but u when it stands for ...
... allowed to approach , as if thus , from their being composed of two , to indicate a plural number . In writing , this limited meaning of the u was signified by its taking an n after it , as un , which means u , but u when it stands for ...
Sivu 21
... allow an n or a g to be heard . I make this latter observation , because most Englishmen tolerably acquainted with French , do believe that both an n and a g are ever heard in French nasal sounds ; and though no Frenchman will admit ...
... allow an n or a g to be heard . I make this latter observation , because most Englishmen tolerably acquainted with French , do believe that both an n and a g are ever heard in French nasal sounds ; and though no Frenchman will admit ...
Sivu 22
... allow the n to be heard , which we may do by placing a silent e after it , thus , aine , the syllable ain has no longer the same sound . Then is ai in ain or in aim made to have the sound it has from its being affected by an m ? Not in ...
... allow the n to be heard , which we may do by placing a silent e after it , thus , aine , the syllable ain has no longer the same sound . Then is ai in ain or in aim made to have the sound it has from its being affected by an m ? Not in ...
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The Discovery of the Science of Languages: In Which Are Shown the Real ... Morgan Peter Kavanagh Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 2016 |
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
affirmative Aleph allow Alpha already seen already shown ancient animal appear bad meaning beginning belonging character composed consequently contraction correct Cybele discovery Divinity earth easily conceived English word epsilon equal to iv eternity etois être evident existence fallen father follows French language French pronoun French word frequently gamma ginally give glish God's son Greek alphabet Greek language Greek word half head Hence ic iv idea implies instance is-i iv-er knowledge lambda Latin Latin word latter word least difference literally means livre lysed lysis means double meant mind negative observation perceive plural number preceded precisely equal present pronoun prove quently racter reader remark Saxon sequently signify single soul sound stands in apposition syllable synonymous three letters three words truth whilst whole womb word becomes word for three word in Greek words mean written
Suositut otteet
Sivu 292 - The consideration, then, of ideas and words as the great instruments of knowledge, makes no despicable part of their contemplation who would take a view of human knowledge in the whole extent of it. And perhaps, if they were distinctly weighed and duly considered, they would afford us another sort of logic and critic than what we have been hitherto acquainted with.
Sivu 82 - And they said to one another, Go to, let us make brick and burn them thoroughly. And they had brick for stone and slime had they for mortar. And...
Sivu 223 - For both the lignage,2 and the certain sire, From which I sprung, from me are hidden yet. For all so soon as life did me admit Into this world, and...
Sivu 92 - ... femelle dans le voisinage l'un de l'autre, et ne met pas leur couche nuptiale loin de leur berceau. Mais il ya une consonnance de formes bien plus intime encore que celle des deux sexes; c'est la duplicité d'organes qui existe dans chaque individu.
Sivu 88 - I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty,
Sivu 201 - English between the bark of a dog and the bark of a tree? There is none whatever, nor can there be in any language any other difference between these words than that of form.
Sivu 289 - To it, more than to any other cause, must be attributed the rapid and almost unopposed success of the agitation for autonomy which carried the Enabling Act (1919).
Sivu 117 - ... some form of contingent knowledge. In all the axioms, for example, the subject represents a contingent and the predicate a necessary truth, the former implying the latter. Thus we have the axioms, Body implies space, Succession implies time, Phenomena imply substance, Events imply a cause, and Things equal to the same thing must be equal to one another. Now the implied cannot, by any possibility, be incompatible with, but must be explicative of, that by which the former is implied. Here we have...
Sivu 85 - Each line of said poem, formed by a composed word, is the name of one of the letters of the Greek alphabet, rearranged, as we have it, four hundred and three years before the Christian era, under the archonship of Euclydes.
Sivu 301 - I feel as confident as I do of my own existence, that such total blindness and profound apathy cannot possibly endure.