PhilologyAppleton, 1877 - 164 pages |
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Page 8
... root of this is cam = to be bent or crooked , which is supposed to be the origin of the name of our most crooked river . The old sense of ' chamberlain ' has not quite died out of our recollection ; yet when we speak of the Lord ...
... root of this is cam = to be bent or crooked , which is supposed to be the origin of the name of our most crooked river . The old sense of ' chamberlain ' has not quite died out of our recollection ; yet when we speak of the Lord ...
Page 28
... root of the verb was as , then es , as you see in Latin es - t : were is for wese , the root being vas ' to dwell : ' cp . the German wesen . But this distaste for s did not lead to its loss from any of these languages ; it was merely ...
... root of the verb was as , then es , as you see in Latin es - t : were is for wese , the root being vas ' to dwell : ' cp . the German wesen . But this distaste for s did not lead to its loss from any of these languages ; it was merely ...
Page 31
... root meaning to eat , and edit means ' he eats ' - but there is an older form est , which results from the d coming into contact with the t without an intervening . You can- not say ' ed - t , ' and therefore the d was changed into s in ...
... root meaning to eat , and edit means ' he eats ' - but there is an older form est , which results from the d coming into contact with the t without an intervening . You can- not say ' ed - t , ' and therefore the d was changed into s in ...
Page 34
... root , may be a result of lazy articulation . 35. We have , however , often added a letter at the end of a word through mere laziness : such is the d in sound ( French son from Latin sonus ) lend ( but there is no d in loan ) , & c ...
... root , may be a result of lazy articulation . 35. We have , however , often added a letter at the end of a word through mere laziness : such is the d in sound ( French son from Latin sonus ) lend ( but there is no d in loan ) , & c ...
Page 41
... root ; which is seen in defend , & c . 43. These instances are enough to show how great an effect this cleaving to a rule , through right or through wrong , may have on a language . I have not time to point out how much of the same ...
... root ; which is seen in defend , & c . 43. These instances are enough to show how great an effect this cleaving to a rule , through right or through wrong , may have on a language . I have not time to point out how much of the same ...
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Popular passages
Page 8 - If we should fail? Lady M. We fail! But screw your courage to the sticking-place, And we'll not fail. When Duncan is asleep — Whereto the rather shall his day's hard journey Soundly invite him — his two chamberlains Will I with wine and wassail so convince That memory, the warder of the brain, Shall be a fume, and the receipt of reason A limbeck only...
Page 67 - They had horses to drive (not to ride), and goats, dogs, and bees ; from the honey they made a sweet drink ; they made clothing of the wool of the sheep and the skins of beasts. They had to guard against the wolf, the bear, and the snake. . . . They dressed their food at the fire, and they were acquainted with soup. They also knew and could work with three metals— gold, silver, and copper. They used in battle the sword and the bow. They made boats, but they knew not the sea. They could reckon up...
Page 11 - Douglas blood, With mitre sheen and rocquet white ; Yet showed his meek and thoughtful eye But little pride of prelacy: More pleased that, in a barbarous age. He gave rude Scotland Virgil's page, Than that beneath his rule he held The bishopric of fair Dtmkeld.
Page 23 - ... which we must surrender if a fuller knowledge shows that they are untenable. In a word, we believe that there are certain permanent principles regulating the changes in our language, which, in the derived scientific sense of the word, we call laws; and if we find that these principles act in other languages as well as our own, we say that these laws, or some of them, are universal in their application; and this is the justification of our claim that there is a Science of Language.
Page 66 - ... line between ascertained fact and uncertain, though perhaps probable, conjecture is so clearly drawn that the reader cannot well go wrong. Thus, after describing the different members of the Indo-European or Aryan group of languages, the author arrives at the following well-founded conclusions : — " It is possible to trace back singly the different lines of speech which we have briefly described, and to arrive at a common Indo-European language, which must have been spoken by a fairly civilized...
Page 131 - The other shape, If shape it might be called that shape had none Distinguishable in member, joint or limb; Or substance might be called that shadow seemed; For each seemed either; black it stood as night, Fierce as ten furies, terrible as Hell, And shook a dreadful dart; what seemed his head The likeness of a kingly crown had on...
Page 67 - ... and they divided their time by months, according to the moon (the measurer). In religion they had no clear term for God, but seem to have personified the sky as the Heavenfather, the source of light and life. Clearly such a race as this, so far advanced in the knowledge of the necessaries and even many of the comforts of life, differed widely from the infinite number of savage races which even now occupy the world : it is not among the Indo-Europeans that we must look for the first beginning...