Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 3British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 49
Page 157
... sense ' of relationship terms I have been told that the names ' have the original sense ' , in so far as they exactly define the conditions to which they are applied . Persons who can reason thus are ill to reason with ! The original ...
... sense ' of relationship terms I have been told that the names ' have the original sense ' , in so far as they exactly define the conditions to which they are applied . Persons who can reason thus are ill to reason with ! The original ...
Page 165
... sense that to us is the most familiar or impressive may be illustrated from the Latin noun lacus . The modern limitation of this word , in the sense of the French lac , the Italian lago , and the English lake , has distorted our feeling ...
... sense that to us is the most familiar or impressive may be illustrated from the Latin noun lacus . The modern limitation of this word , in the sense of the French lac , the Italian lago , and the English lake , has distorted our feeling ...
Page 172
... sense supplanted the original one in the case of persons , and was even transferred to things , to which it was etymologically inappropriate . Of these , however , the participle could be used in the old sense which Horace expresses by ...
... sense supplanted the original one in the case of persons , and was even transferred to things , to which it was etymologically inappropriate . Of these , however , the participle could be used in the old sense which Horace expresses by ...
Contents
SIXTH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING June 25 1908 | 7 |
SUMMARY KNIGHTS FEES BY PAUL VINOGRADOFF Fellow of | 15 |
AN UNRECOGNIZED WESTMINSTER CHRONICLER 13811394 | 65 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aborigines Academy ancient appears beginning belong Britain British called century character Church cities classical close coins continued criticism doubt earlier early edition electrum England English evidence example fact father French give gold Greek hand Head Holinshed influence inscriptions interest issued Italy John King known language later Latin learning least letters Ligurians lines Lord matter means mentioned Milton mother nature never once original Paradise Lost passage passed perhaps period Persian persons Plautus poem poet poetry present probably Professor published question race reason reference regard relations relationship remains Roman rule says seems sense speak staters story style suggested supposed things thought translation tribes true Westminster whole writers written