Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 82 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 52
Page 114
... Latin was mainly the speech of the Roman army and that once the army had departed , Latin was no longer a spoken language there . But opinions as to the role of spoken Latin in Britain , especially after the Anglo - Saxon invasion ...
... Latin was mainly the speech of the Roman army and that once the army had departed , Latin was no longer a spoken language there . But opinions as to the role of spoken Latin in Britain , especially after the Anglo - Saxon invasion ...
Page 145
... Latin inscriptio , ontimbran for instruere , toþegnung for administratio , etc. How are we to account for such formations ? Sweet's judgment was obviously well - founded , for many of these words are rare , often found in only a single ...
... Latin inscriptio , ontimbran for instruere , toþegnung for administratio , etc. How are we to account for such formations ? Sweet's judgment was obviously well - founded , for many of these words are rare , often found in only a single ...
Page 147
British Academy. 152 the function of the Latin ablative , or another Latin case form ; they add the definite article to nouns where English grammar requires this , and they insert personal pronouns in the appropriate position , so as to ...
British Academy. 152 the function of the Latin ablative , or another Latin case form ; they add the definite article to nouns where English grammar requires this , and they insert personal pronouns in the appropriate position , so as to ...
Contents
Lectures | 1 |
The Genetics of Celtic Populations | 37 |
An Essay on Survival | 59 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alan Taylor Alexander American Anaxarchus Anglo-Saxon England appeared argument Audrey Audrey Richards Aurignacian behaviour Braithwaite Britain British Academy Callisthenes Cambridge cent century Châtelperronian Christian Cicero classical comfort Commonwealth consolatio consolation cultural death distribution of income early economic empire Europe European evidence example family system Figure followed frequency genetic German Gini coefficient glosses Greek grief historian household human important industries inequality Islam Japan Japanese Jenghiz Khan kinship language later Latin lectures linguistic literature loanwords London Malaparte Manderley Mansergh Mellars modern Mongol nomads Observer Old English original Oxford paper patterns period person philosophical Plutarch political populations problems published Pyrrho Rabelais Ralph religion religious Review Richard Scotland Scottish Seneca Shakespeare Smith social society sources Stone suffering theory Tom Smith topos tradition University Upper Palaeolithic W. K. Hancock western words writing wrote