The North American Review, Band 4Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1826 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 310
... languages of Europe , which sprung from the Latin , or which were finally settled on the basis of this language , assumed the characteristick features by which they have since been distinguished . We are not to suppose , that men were ...
... languages of Europe , which sprung from the Latin , or which were finally settled on the basis of this language , assumed the characteristick features by which they have since been distinguished . We are not to suppose , that men were ...
Seite 338
... language was written from the left to the right . " I. 259 . " I have never been able to hear of the existence of any work in the ancient Pehlivi Language that could be deemed histori- cal . Sir John Chardin informs us , that Abbas the ...
... language was written from the left to the right . " I. 259 . " I have never been able to hear of the existence of any work in the ancient Pehlivi Language that could be deemed histori- cal . Sir John Chardin informs us , that Abbas the ...
Seite 351
... language spoken at the time they were moulded , and the cha- racters which represented the sounds of that language . We may even look back through the vista of ages to the time when the whole earth was of one language , ' and when the ...
... language spoken at the time they were moulded , and the cha- racters which represented the sounds of that language . We may even look back through the vista of ages to the time when the whole earth was of one language , ' and when the ...
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sion | 47 |
Ancient Persian Bricks 328 422 | 48 |
Ancient Persian Bricks 328 422 | 57 |
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