Proceedings of the British Academy, Svazek 3 |
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Strana 36
... Ligurians should also have never spoken anything else than an Aryan language . We know little , indeed , respecting the speech of the Ligurians , but there is now good reason for believing that they spoke an Indo - European tongue .
... Ligurians should also have never spoken anything else than an Aryan language . We know little , indeed , respecting the speech of the Ligurians , but there is now good reason for believing that they spoke an Indo - European tongue .
Strana 54
Welsh and the Irish languages , and the remarkable resemblance which he has traced between their syntax and that of Berber and Egyptian . ... and he assumes that wherever this termination occurs the people spoke a non - Aryan language .
Welsh and the Irish languages , and the remarkable resemblance which he has traced between their syntax and that of Berber and Egyptian . ... and he assumes that wherever this termination occurs the people spoke a non - Aryan language .
Strana 56
Now I have shown that in cases of conquest small bands of invaders coming without women of their own leave little impression on the native language , their children using the tongue of their native mothers 2 : that it is very difficult ...
Now I have shown that in cases of conquest small bands of invaders coming without women of their own leave little impression on the native language , their children using the tongue of their native mothers 2 : that it is very difficult ...
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Obsah
SIXTH ANNUAL General Meeting June 25 1908 | 5 |
SUMMARY KNIGHTS FEES BY PAUL VINOGRADOFF FELLOW OF | 15 |
AN UNRECOGNIZED WESTMINSTER CHRONICLER 13811394 | 65 |
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Aborigines Academy ancient appears beginning belong Britain British called century character Church cities classical close coins continued criticism doubt earlier early edition electrum England English evidence example fact father French give gold Greek hand Head Holinshed influence inscriptions interest issued Italy John King known language later Latin learning least less letters Ligurians lines Lord matter means mentioned Milton mother nature never once original Paradise Lost passage passed perhaps period Persian persons Plautus poem poet poetry present probably Professor published question race reason reference regard relations relationship remains Roman rule says seems sense speak story style suggested supposed things thought translation tribes true Westminster whole writers written