The Southern Quarterly Review, 20. kötetDaniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1851 |
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396. oldal
... relation borne by language to the human mind , which may give rise to the production of similar sounds or combinations of sounds by different individuals or nations , to denote the same idea . Still we must not expect to find this ...
... relation borne by language to the human mind , which may give rise to the production of similar sounds or combinations of sounds by different individuals or nations , to denote the same idea . Still we must not expect to find this ...
401. oldal
... relations , and to deduce from them the laws of inflection prevailing in a language ; but also , and this must be his principal aim , to show by what means these changes are rendered capable of indicating the relations which words are ...
... relations , and to deduce from them the laws of inflection prevailing in a language ; but also , and this must be his principal aim , to show by what means these changes are rendered capable of indicating the relations which words are ...
409. oldal
... relations which bear any resemblance to the attribute from which the body of the name , or the root , as it is called , is derived , are expressed by words into which that root enters ; nay , more , very many words expressing contrasted ...
... relations which bear any resemblance to the attribute from which the body of the name , or the root , as it is called , is derived , are expressed by words into which that root enters ; nay , more , very many words expressing contrasted ...
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