... them from the other, and words that are alike because they are simply modified forms of the same aboriginal word. This supremely important point can be here treated but roughly; yet I hope that, with a few illustrations, it may be rendered intelligible.... Excursions of an Evolutionist - Strana 114autor/autoři: John Fiske - 1884 - 379 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| John Fiske - 1883 - 400 str.
...-nti. l,nl habeoi babe-s, habe-t; habe-mus, habe-tis, habe-nt. Gr. -mi, -si, -ti; -mes, -te, nti. Sir. -mi, -si, -ti; -masi, -tha, -nti. Community of vocabulary...Englishman who inquired, " If a haitch and a ho and a liar and a Jtess and a he don't spell 'orse, what in thunder does it spell, you know?" The infallible... | |
| 1906 - 168 str.
...— "I say, Britisher, can you spell horse?" ENGLISHMAN — " 'Orse ? Why, certainly. It honly takes a haitch and a ho and a har and a hess and a he to spell "What is the meaning of the saying that a man shall earn his bread in the sweat of his brow?"... | |
| 1906 - 170 str.
...YANKEE—"I say, Britisher, can you spell horse?" ENGLISHMAN—" 'Orse ? Why, certainly. It honly takes a haitch and a ho and a har and a hess and a he to spell "What is the meaning of the saying that a man shall earn his bread in the sweat of his brow?"... | |
| Wilfred Whitten - 1924 - 186 str.
...appeared under a drawing of a London cabman in argument with his fare, the " legend," " Well, sir, if a haitch and a ho, and a har and a hess, and a /ze don't spell 'orse, then my name ain't 'Enery "Olmes." The subject recalls Henry Mayhew's parody... | |
| 1881 - 898 str.
...•a, -d, -te, -le, habe-tis, -te, -tha, haba-nd. -ud. 4. -ti. -nti. liabc-nt -nti. -nti. vergence of a language, originally uniform, into two or more...of the Englishman who inquired, " If a haitch and a Im and a har and a kets and a he don't spell 'orse, what the deuce does it spell, you know ? " The... | |
| 1883 - 596 str.
...English undefiled " bespoke them to be of the people who, as some one has remarked, spell " horse with a haitch and a ho and a har and a hess and a he, and call it 'orse." In the morning, 'after the sunbeams had dispersed the fog, it was found that the... | |
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