| Bryan Sykes - 1999 - 218 páginas
...spoken throughout the world; and if all the extinct languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects had to be included, such an arrangement would, I think, be the only possible one . . . this would be strictly natural, as it would connect together all languages, extinct and modern,... | |
| George van Driem - 2001 - 496 páginas
...spoken throughout the world; and if all extinct languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects, had to be included, such an arrangement...the spreading and subsequent isolation and states of civilisation of the several races, descended from a common race) had altered much, and had given rise... | |
| Matthias Dörries - 2002 - 228 páginas
...spoken throughout the world; and if all extinct languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects, had to be included, such an arrangement would, I think, be the only possible one."13 In this passage, Darwin recognized an isomorphism between language descent and human biological... | |
| Charles Darwin - 2003 - 676 páginas
...spoken throughout the world; and if all extinct languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects, had to be included, such an arrangement...the spreading and subsequent isolation and states of civilisation of the several races, descended from a common race) had altered much, and had given rise... | |
| Thomas R. Trautmann - 2005 - 300 páginas
...world; and if all exti ict languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects, had to bi included, such an arrangement would, I think, be the only possible one. . . The various degrees of difference in the languages from the same stock, w >uld have to be expressed... | |
| Nicholas Wade, Professor of Visual Psychology Nicholas Wade - 2006 - 328 páginas
...spoken throughout the world; and if all extinct languages, and all intermediate and slowly changing dialects, had to be included, such an arrangement...the spreading and subsequent isolation and states of civilisation of the several races, descended from a common race) had altered much, and had given rise... | |
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