Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 82 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 46
Page 43
... relatively high frequency in East Anglia , for example , is consistent with Scandinavian colonization and their relatively high A frequency , while the lower frequency in the north of Scotland , which matches that in Iceland , Fisher ...
... relatively high frequency in East Anglia , for example , is consistent with Scandinavian colonization and their relatively high A frequency , while the lower frequency in the north of Scotland , which matches that in Iceland , Fisher ...
Page 340
... relative income of the A sector , which in three years rose from 1.9 times that in B to 2.2 times . These two elements , which played little or no role in the difference between 1975 and 1985 , accounted almost equally for the remainder ...
... relative income of the A sector , which in three years rose from 1.9 times that in B to 2.2 times . These two elements , which played little or no role in the difference between 1975 and 1985 , accounted almost equally for the remainder ...
Page 342
... relative average incomes but also because of the effect on the distribution among those not in work . In Figure 6 ... relatively fortunate , benefiting from occupational pensions and private savings , the other group receiving only 00 ...
... relative average incomes but also because of the effect on the distribution among those not in work . In Figure 6 ... relatively fortunate , benefiting from occupational pensions and private savings , the other group receiving only 00 ...
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