Varronianus: A Critical and Historical Introduction to the Ethnography of Ancient Italy and to the Philological Study of the Latin Language |
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Page ix
... object , was merely a review of existing knowledge , extended by suggestions and materials for further researches . The present repu- blication endeavours to fill up the outline , which was thus presented . It will be found , therefore ...
... object , was merely a review of existing knowledge , extended by suggestions and materials for further researches . The present repu- blication endeavours to fill up the outline , which was thus presented . It will be found , therefore ...
Page xiii
... object , I shall feel myself excused in having thus ventured to commit to a distant press a work necessarily composed amid the dis- tractions and interruptions of a laborious and engrossing profession . J. W. D. THE SCHOOL HALL , BURY ...
... object , I shall feel myself excused in having thus ventured to commit to a distant press a work necessarily composed amid the dis- tractions and interruptions of a laborious and engrossing profession . J. W. D. THE SCHOOL HALL , BURY ...
Page 7
... object is to inquire how they stood related to the Umbrians and Oscans , on whom they more immediately pressed . Niebuhr thinks it not improbable that the Sabines and Oscans were only branches of one stock , and mentions many reasons ...
... object is to inquire how they stood related to the Umbrians and Oscans , on whom they more immediately pressed . Niebuhr thinks it not improbable that the Sabines and Oscans were only branches of one stock , and mentions many reasons ...
Page 20
... object ' . Livy tells us ( X. 4 , ) that in the year 301 B. c . the legate Cn . Fulvius , serving in Etruria , escaped an ambush and detected some pretended shepherds who would have led him into it , by learning from the men of Care who ...
... object ' . Livy tells us ( X. 4 , ) that in the year 301 B. c . the legate Cn . Fulvius , serving in Etruria , escaped an ambush and detected some pretended shepherds who would have led him into it , by learning from the men of Care who ...
Page 32
... object which stands between the lions , and affords no explanation of their duality . It can be shown , on the contrary , that it must be in- tended to indicate that the two lords of Mycenae , some twin- power or duumvirate there , had ...
... object which stands between the lions , and affords no explanation of their duality . It can be shown , on the contrary , that it must be in- tended to indicate that the two lords of Mycenae , some twin- power or duumvirate there , had ...
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Varronianus, a Critical and Historical Introduction to the Ethnography of ... John William Donaldson No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
according adjective adverbs affinities affix ancient appears apud called Celtic Clusium comp compound connected connexion consonant corresponding Crat crude form declension denotes dental derived distinct esto Etruria Etruscan Etruscan language Etrusk etymology Eugubine Tables explained express Feronia Fest Festus Gell genitive Goth Gothic Greece Greek guttural Haruspex Herodotus Hesych Icelandic idioms indicated Indo-Germanic inscription Italy labial Latin language Latium latter Lepsius lingua Lithuanians locative Low-German meaning Müller neque neuter Niebuhr nouns Old Norse original Oscan Oscan language participle Pelasgian Pelasgian language philology plural prepositions probably pronominal element pronoun quæ quis quod quoted referred remark represented river Roman Rome root Sabine Sanscr Sanscrit Sclavonian Scythian Scythian language seems Semitic sibilant signifies singular statíf Strabo sunt syllable synonym tense termination tion tribes Tuscan Tyrrhenians Umbrian Umbrian language Varro verb vowel word δὲ καὶ
Popular passages
Page 407 - Qui autem omnia, quae ad cultum deorum pertinerent, diligenter retractarent et tamquam relegerent, sunt dicti religiosi ex relegendo, ut elegantes ex eligendo, itemque ex diligendo diligentes, ex intelligendo intelligentes.
Page 451 - Pro Deo amur et pro christian poblo et nostro commun salvament, d'ist di in avant, in quant Deus savir et podir me dunat, si salvarai eo cist meon fradre Karlo, et in...
Page 214 - Occentassint antiqui dicebant quod nunc convitium fecerint dicimus, quod id clare, et cum quodam canore fit, ut procul exaudiri possit. Quod turpe habetur, quia non sine causa fieri putatur.
Page iii - Varronianus. A Critical and Historical Introduction to the Ethnography of Ancient Italy, and to the Philological Study of the Latin Language. By the late JW DONALDSON, DD Third Edition, revised and considerably enlarged. 8vo. 16».
Page 158 - Tusco verbo ludio vocabatur, nomen histrionibus inditum; qui non, sicut ante, Fescennino versu similem incompositum temere ac rudem alternis iaciebant, sed impletas modis saturas descripto iam ad tibicinem cantu motuque congruenti peragebant.
Page 242 - Quintilian's bekannter stelle gefunden zu haben: nam et illa, quae est sexta nostrarum, paene non humana voce, vel omnino non voce potius, inter discrimina dentium efflanda est: quae, etiam quum vocalem proxime accipit, quassa quodammodo, utique quoties aliquam consonantem frangit, ut in hoc ipso frangit, multo fit horridior.
Page 113 - Aureliam familiam ex Sabinis oriundam a Sole dictam putant, quod ei publice a populo Romano datus sit locus, in quo sacra faceret Soli ; qui ex hoc Auseli dicebantur, ut Valesii, Papisii pro eo quod est Valerii, Papirii.
Page 214 - Sed si quidem ex causa donationis aut dotis aut qualibet alia ex causa tradantur, sine dubio transferuntur: venditae vero et traditae non aliter emptori adquiruntur quam si is venditori pretium solvent vel alio modo ei satisfecerit, veluti expromissore aut pignore dato, quod cavetur quidem etiam lege duodecim tabularum: tamen recte dicitur et jure gentium, id est jure naturali, id effici. [sed si is qui vendidit fidem emptoris secutus fuerit, dicendum est, statim rem emptoris fieri.] § 42.