Outlines of Comparative Philology: With a Sketch of the Languages of Europe, Arranged Upon Philologic Principles, and a Brief History of the Art of Writing |
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Page 15
... course of develop- ment and decay , and a similar rule is observed in the history of languages . This resemblance becomes the more striking , the more languages are contemplated simultaneously , and the points they have in common become ...
... course of develop- ment and decay , and a similar rule is observed in the history of languages . This resemblance becomes the more striking , the more languages are contemplated simultaneously , and the points they have in common become ...
Page 17
... course , feel- ings and forebodings in the human mind , unutterable and too ethereal for human speech ; but thought itself , as a clear con- ception , springs forth from the mind , already embodied in some tangible shape . Thus only can ...
... course , feel- ings and forebodings in the human mind , unutterable and too ethereal for human speech ; but thought itself , as a clear con- ception , springs forth from the mind , already embodied in some tangible shape . Thus only can ...
Page 19
... course , beyond its power : as the body is unable , the flesh too weak , to follow all the impulses and desires of our immortal soul , so the bodily word renders but imperfectly the imponderable thought , and rests content with making ...
... course , beyond its power : as the body is unable , the flesh too weak , to follow all the impulses and desires of our immortal soul , so the bodily word renders but imperfectly the imponderable thought , and rests content with making ...
Page 20
... course , first and foremost to love . If this were true , -- the grammarians of Port Royal slily insinuated , the world might have had a mys- terious , secret language , like ancient Egypt , only that here the young , boys and girls ...
... course , first and foremost to love . If this were true , -- the grammarians of Port Royal slily insinuated , the world might have had a mys- terious , secret language , like ancient Egypt , only that here the young , boys and girls ...
Page 26
... course , attach the very greatest importance to the fact that the word of God distinctly states , that man and language were both created by the Maker of all things and found together in paradise , and that , consequently , the whole ...
... course , attach the very greatest importance to the fact that the word of God distinctly states , that man and language were both created by the Maker of all things and found together in paradise , and that , consequently , the whole ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent already ancient Anglo-Saxon antiquity appear Asia authors Basque beauty branches called Celtic century CHAPTER character Chaucer Chinese common Comparative Philology connection conquered Conquest considered consonants dialects earth elements England English English language Europe existence express Finnish foreign French furnished genius German grammar Greek guage Henry VIII idea idioms imitate important Indo-European languages inflecting inflecting languages influence instance Italian knowledge known labors large number Latin laws Layamon learned less letters literature Magyar means mind modern mother tongue mysterious national tongue native nature noble Norman nouns once original Oscan peculiar philologists philosophers poet preserved principles purposes race relation represent researches Roman Romance languages root Sanscrit Saxon scholars Shemitic Slavic so-called sound speak speech spirit spoken success syllable Tataric Tataric languages thought tion trace Ulfilas verb vernacular vowels whilst words writing written
Popular passages
Page 182 - The unlearned or • foolish fantastical, that smells but of learning (such fellows as have seen learned men in their days), will so Latin their tongues, that the simple cannot but wonder at their talk, and think surely they speak by some revelation. I know them, that think rhetoric to stand wholly upon dark words ; and he that can catch an inkhorn term by the tail, him they count to be a fine Englishman and a good rhetorician.
Page 189 - Ours is a noble language, a beautiful language. I can tolerate a Germanism for family sake ; but he who uses a Latin or a French phrase where a pure old English word does as well, ought to be hung, drawn and quartered for high treason against his mother-tongue.
Page 139 - ... and known, and better understood, in the tongue used in the said realm, and by so much every man of the said realm may the better govern himself without offending of the law, and the better keep, save, and defend his heritage and possessions; and in divers regions and countries, where the king, the nobles, and...
Page 167 - Scotch poets of this period, who have adorned the English language, by a strain of versification, expression, and poetical imagery, far superior to their age ; and who consequently deserve to be mentioned in a general review of the progress of our national poetry.
Page 182 - English, that they forget altogether their mother's language. And I dare swear this, if some of their mothers were alive, they were not able to tell what they say : and yet these fine English clerks will say, they speak in their mother tongue, if a man should charge them for counterfeiting the King's English.
Page 181 - Some seek so far for outlandish English, that they forget altogether their mother's language. And I dare swear this, if some of their mothers were alive, they were not able to tell what they say...
Page 143 - It is still more to the honour of Caxton, that when he was informed of the imperfections of his edition, he very readily undertook a second, ' for to satisfy the author,' (as he says himself,) ' whereas tofore by ignorance he had erred in hurting and diffaming his book.
Page 121 - The Normans had conquered the land and the race, but they struggled in vain against the language that conquered them in its turn, and, by its spirit, converted them into Englishmen. In vain did they haughtily refuse to learn a word of that despised tongue, and asked, in the words of the minister of Henry III., indignantly : " Am I an Englishman, that I should know these (Saxon) charters and these laws...
Page 118 - For a time the two idioms lived side by side, though in very different conditions ; the one, the language of the master at court and in the castles of the soldiers who had become noble lords and powerful barons ; the other, the language of the conquered, spoken only in the lowly hut of the subjugated people.
Page 170 - And, for there is so great diversite" " In English, and in writing of our tongue, " So pray I to God that none mis-write thee...