Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 6British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 49
... regard to my reading , I must say that I arrived at it only by leaving out of consideration a number of scratches , which I would treat as accidental . There is a difficulty about what I have come to regard as a Latin M instead of an ...
... regard to my reading , I must say that I arrived at it only by leaving out of consideration a number of scratches , which I would treat as accidental . There is a difficulty about what I have come to regard as a Latin M instead of an ...
Page 223
... regard to the relations between written and spoken English that does not obviously involve some inference as to the merits and defects of the traditional orthography , or the magnitude of the difficulties in the way of any attempt to ...
... regard to the relations between written and spoken English that does not obviously involve some inference as to the merits and defects of the traditional orthography , or the magnitude of the difficulties in the way of any attempt to ...
Page 367
... regard as meaning that Somed- was son of Cavos , a name which we have already had in Cavoseniargii ( p . 324 above ) . There also used to be , at Caer Gai , a stone bearing among other names a genitive Burgo - cavi . The sites of both ...
... regard as meaning that Somed- was son of Cavos , a name which we have already had in Cavoseniargii ( p . 324 above ) . There also used to be , at Caer Gai , a stone bearing among other names a genitive Burgo - cavi . The sites of both ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS BY THE RIGHT HON VISCOUNT BRYCE O M | 7 |
THE CELTIC INSCRIPTIONS OF CISALPINE GAUL BY SIR JOHN RHŶS | 23 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE OPENING MEETING OF THE INTER | 113 |
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