Proceedings of the Philological Society

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Vol. 6, appendix: A dictionary of the Circassian language / by L. Loewe.
 

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Página 48 - One that was a woman, sir; but, rest her soul, she 's dead. Ham. How absolute the knave is ! we must speak by the card, or equivocation will undo us. By the Lord, Horatio, these three years I have taken note of it ; the age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the courtier, he galls his kibe.— How long hast thou been a grave-maker?
Página 200 - A gulf profound as that Serbonian bog Betwixt Damiata and Mount Casius old, Where armies whole have sunk: the parching air Burns frore, and cold performs th 'effect of fire.
Página 142 - Somtime like a man, or like an ape; Or like an angel can I ride or go; It is no wonder thing though it be so, A lousy jogelour can deceiven thee, And parde yet can I more craft than he.
Página 175 - Bopp's Comparative Grammar of the Sanscrit, Zend, Greek, Latin, Lithuanian, Gothic, German, and Slavonic Languages.
Página 115 - Home is he brought, and laid in sumptuous bed : Where many skilful leeches him abide To salve his hurts, that yet still freshly bled. In wine and oil they wash his woundes wide, And softly gan embalm on every side.
Página 21 - ... postulates made at the beginning of the paper: First, " No American language has an isolated position when compared with the other tongues en masse rather than with the language of any particular class;" second, "The affinities between the language of the New World, as determined by their vocabularies, is not less real than that inferred from the analogies of their grammatical structure.
Página 153 - ... that may ; For hir me reweth sare ; On child bed ther sche lay, Was born Of hir Tristrem, that day, Ac hye no bade nought that morn. XXI. A ring of riche hewe, Than hadde that leuedi fre ; Sche toke it Rouhand trewe ; Hir sone sche bad it be ; — " Mi brother wele it knewe, Mi fader yaf it me ; King Markes may rewe, The ring than he it se, And moun ; As Rouland loued the, Thou kepe it to his sone.
Página 118 - ... in every part: men wield their forms of speech as they do their limbs — spontaneously, knowing nothing of their construction or the means by which these instruments possess their power. It may be even said that the commencement of the age of self-consciousness is identical with the close of that of vitality in language.
Página 163 - ... and those of nouns by changes of form called cases. It has been common among grammarians to regard those terminational changes as evolved by some unknown process from the body of the noun, as the branches of a tree spring from the stem ; or as elements unmeaning in themselves, but employed arbitrarily or conventionally to modify the meanings of words. This latter theory is countenanced by AW Schlegel, in a well-known passage in his work, ' Observations sur la Langue et la Litterature Provencales,'...

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