Outlines of the Philosophy of Universal History: Applied to the Language and Religion, เล่มที่ 2Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1854 - 488 หน้า |
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หน้า xiv
... writer , who respects both his subject and the public , cannot offer , at the present stage of our knowledge , such an epic account of universal history , unin- terrupted by research , as the Muses inspired Herodotus to write , and the ...
... writer , who respects both his subject and the public , cannot offer , at the present stage of our knowledge , such an epic account of universal history , unin- terrupted by research , as the Muses inspired Herodotus to write , and the ...
หน้า 8
... writers respecting the physiognomy of the Sarmatæ , the only admis- sible one . Those tribes which Herodotus knew , spoke their language mixed with that of the Scythians , which does not prove that the rest did . The seventh , nearly ...
... writers respecting the physiognomy of the Sarmatæ , the only admis- sible one . Those tribes which Herodotus knew , spoke their language mixed with that of the Scythians , which does not prove that the rest did . The seventh , nearly ...
หน้า 12
... writing at the opening of the fourth millennium before Christ , presents an idiom so considerably different from the historical formations , although undoubtedly of the same family , that we must place the culminating point of its gram ...
... writing at the opening of the fourth millennium before Christ , presents an idiom so considerably different from the historical formations , although undoubtedly of the same family , that we must place the culminating point of its gram ...
หน้า 13
... writing . For this considera- tion belongs exclusively to the Iranian and the Semitic family , and most preponderantly to the latter . Tur learnt to write from his more intellectual brethren , and , generally speaking , very late . The ...
... writing . For this considera- tion belongs exclusively to the Iranian and the Semitic family , and most preponderantly to the latter . Tur learnt to write from his more intellectual brethren , and , generally speaking , very late . The ...
หน้า 14
... writing , and we find Kham thus using his images to represent by them syllables , and , in process of time , even single letters , irrespective of their meaning . Kham must himself have in- vented this means of writing , because he uses ...
... writing , and we find Kham thus using his images to represent by them syllables , and , in process of time , even single letters , irrespective of their meaning . Kham must himself have in- vented this means of writing , because he uses ...
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accent alphabet ancient Arabic Arian Asia asper aspirates become called Chaldee character Chinese Chinese language Christ Christian Church connected conscience consonants Coptic dental diacritical dialects diphthongs distinct divine Egyptian language element engl English eternal existence express faith Father finite flatus French fuit German grammatical Greek guttural Hebr Hebrew human idiom individual infinite Iranian Italian italics Japhetic Jesus labial language languages of Asia Latin lenis Lepsius letters lingual manifestation mankind Max Müller mind Missionary modifications Müller nations nature noun object organic original palatal peculiar philology philosophical physiological primitive principle Professor Lepsius pronounced pronunciation race reason religion represent Roman roots Sanser Sanskrit Scripture secondary formation semi-vowel Semitic Semitic languages sibilant simple sound speech Spirit spiritus asper spiritus lenis syllable symbol tenuis things Thou thought tion tongue tradition tribes triliteral truth Turanian unity universal history unto verb vowels words writing