The Journal of American Folklore, Svazky 3–4American Folk-lore Society, 1963 |
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Strana 192
... English , when , in point of fact , he is usually altogether unfamiliar with that jargon , as most of the immigrants come from districts remote from the cities where it serves as the trade language in communications with foreigners . A ...
... English , when , in point of fact , he is usually altogether unfamiliar with that jargon , as most of the immigrants come from districts remote from the cities where it serves as the trade language in communications with foreigners . A ...
Strana 251
... English ; on the contrary , English fairy - tales , lost in England through want of record , have continued to exist , in great mass , among Irish mothers and nurses . It is within the knowledge of the writer that only a few years since ...
... English ; on the contrary , English fairy - tales , lost in England through want of record , have continued to exist , in great mass , among Irish mothers and nurses . It is within the knowledge of the writer that only a few years since ...
Strana 304
... English of the lexicons . When the American is obliged to reform his vocabulary , for reasons best known to himself , he takes what he requires from English provincialisms , Old English , or Anglo - Saxon , or else he utters the Old English ...
... English of the lexicons . When the American is obliged to reform his vocabulary , for reasons best known to himself , he takes what he requires from English provincialisms , Old English , or Anglo - Saxon , or else he utters the Old English ...
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ALFRED NUTT American Folk-Lore Society ancient animals Apaches appears B'Rabby Beaver belief birds Black Cat bones Boston Brinton brother Buffalo called Cambridge ceremony character Chasta chief child Chinese clan collection custom Deer earth English fire folk-tales FRANZ BOAS gens gentes girl give given Gypsy hand Hobyah Indians interesting Iroquois island Journal jûnně killed Lake language legend Leland lived lodge lore Mass means moon mother mountain muskrat myth mythology Nanabush Navajos negroes night observed Onondaga origin paper Passamaquoddy PAUL SÉBILLOT person Philadelphia phonograph phratry player popular primitive Public Library pueblo race remarks rhyme River rock Rogue River sacred Shelta side Snake Dance song spirit spit Stewart Culin stone story superstitions tale tion told tradition tree tribe village Vw'en vwas witch woman words York Zuñi