The Southern Review, Band 4A. E. Miller., 1829 |
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... doubt about the former existence of a more ancient language , anterior to and parent of the Sanscrit , and now entirely lost . How far the Celtic , the Irish , and the Welsh , are connected with this research , we shall see as we ...
... doubt about the former existence of a more ancient language , anterior to and parent of the Sanscrit , and now entirely lost . How far the Celtic , the Irish , and the Welsh , are connected with this research , we shall see as we ...
Seite 5
... doubt . The Persian alphabet , our author remarks , is extremely like the Arabic . It was the opinion of Sir Wm . Jones , that in very re- mote times , one nation , whose inhabitants were black , and whose empire was at or near Sidon ...
... doubt . The Persian alphabet , our author remarks , is extremely like the Arabic . It was the opinion of Sir Wm . Jones , that in very re- mote times , one nation , whose inhabitants were black , and whose empire was at or near Sidon ...
Seite 6
... doubt is , that all these languages are dialects or grammatical mutations of some one more ancient tongue , referable rather than traceable to the indeterminate region of ancient Scythia . Peculiarity of the Irish Alphabet . ( p . 24 ...
... doubt is , that all these languages are dialects or grammatical mutations of some one more ancient tongue , referable rather than traceable to the indeterminate region of ancient Scythia . Peculiarity of the Irish Alphabet . ( p . 24 ...
Seite 12
... doubt of their common origin . Mr. Higgins says , these are some examples out of a great many . He thinks the Latin was not derived from the Greek , or the Greek from the Phoenician , but all of them from some common parent lan- guage ...
... doubt of their common origin . Mr. Higgins says , these are some examples out of a great many . He thinks the Latin was not derived from the Greek , or the Greek from the Phoenician , but all of them from some common parent lan- guage ...
Seite 13
... doubt . These Barbarians being Umbri and Pelasgoi ; Celtæ : for the Curetes were Celts , and established the Olympic Games . ( See Pezron's Antiquities of Nations , where he has collected a number of Latin and Greek words , certainly ...
... doubt . These Barbarians being Umbri and Pelasgoi ; Celtæ : for the Curetes were Celts , and established the Olympic Games . ( See Pezron's Antiquities of Nations , where he has collected a number of Latin and Greek words , certainly ...
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