Journal of the American Oriental Society, Band 7American Oriental Society, 1862 "Proceedings" or "Select minutes of meetings" are included in each volume (except v. 3, 12). |
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Seite 163
... final syllables lee and lo , I do not know whence they come . Te dikél sarré , ' should he see all ; ' sarré o manushé isí kho- khavné , ' all men are liars ; ' sávvore o róm , all the Gypsies ; ' keti isúnas sávvore ? how many were you ...
... final syllables lee and lo , I do not know whence they come . Te dikél sarré , ' should he see all ; ' sarré o manushé isí kho- khavné , ' all men are liars ; ' sávvore o róm , all the Gypsies ; ' keti isúnas sávvore ? how many were you ...
Seite 167
... final r should be added ; in Borrow's , the final r is changed to l . The fem . jucali is the Sr. sukara . The Gyp- sies form all feminine nouns in i , as we shall see in speaking of the nouns ( Section V ) . BECAUSE Sostar . - Appears ...
... final r should be added ; in Borrow's , the final r is changed to l . The fem . jucali is the Sr. sukara . The Gyp- sies form all feminine nouns in i , as we shall see in speaking of the nouns ( Section V ) . BECAUSE Sostar . - Appears ...
Seite 176
... final radical , like all verbs of the same conjugation : chhinna , from this root , is ' divided , cut . ' The Gypsies have rejected the final radical conso- nant , and in its place have preserved the characteristic n of the con ...
... final radical , like all verbs of the same conjugation : chhinna , from this root , is ' divided , cut . ' The Gypsies have rejected the final radical conso- nant , and in its place have preserved the characteristic n of the con ...
Seite 187
... final syllable ta , which the Greek has preserved . The Slavonic , which has preserved many archetypal Sanskrit words in their utmost purity , has zito and zeta , signifying all kinds of cereal products . This term is very frequently ...
... final syllable ta , which the Greek has preserved . The Slavonic , which has preserved many archetypal Sanskrit words in their utmost purity , has zito and zeta , signifying all kinds of cereal products . This term is very frequently ...
Seite 190
... final syllable , differ- ing much from the universal pronunciation of the Greeks them- selves . * HAIR - bal ; Br . , bala ; Bor . , bal . - The Sr. bâla , to which I have refer- red in speaking of Foor , is applied by the Gypsies ...
... final syllable , differ- ing much from the universal pronunciation of the Greeks them- selves . * HAIR - bal ; Br . , bala ; Bor . , bal . - The Sr. bâla , to which I have refer- red in speaking of Foor , is applied by the Gypsies ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent alphabet Atharva-Veda Atharvan text authority avagraha character circumflex combination commentary commentator cites commentator's compound consonants corresponding declension Dravidian Dravidian languages enclitic euphonic farther final gives Greek Gypsies Hindu illustrations Indo-European languages inscription instances krama language latter lingual London manuscripts mute nasal nouns original pada pada-text palatal Paris particle passage phonetic Plur plural Prâtiçâkhya preceding preposition Prof pronounced pronunciation Prophet referred regard Rig-Veda Rik Pr root rule Sahih sandhi sanhitâ Sanskrit Scythian semivowel separate sibilant signifies sonant sound spirant suffix surd svarita syllable Tâitt term thou tion tradition translation treatise Turkish utterance Vâj Veda verb verse viii visarjaniya vols vowel word xviii yama أن ابن الحديث الله عليه وسلم ان او بن به صلى الله عليه على عن في فيه قال كان لا لم ما من هو ولا وهو يكون
Beliebte Passagen
Seite xvi - The Wonders of Elora ; or the Narrative of a Journey to the Temples and Dwellings excavated out of a Mountain of Granite, and extending upwards of a Mile and a Quarter, at Elora, in the East Indies...
Seite xxiv - A History of Egyptian Mummies, and an account of the worship and embalming of the sacred animals...
Seite xvi - Hindu infanticide ; an account of the measures adopted for suppressing the practice of the systematic murder, by their parents, of female infants ; with incidental remarks on other customs peculiar to the natives of India.
Seite x - A Dictionary of the Chinese Language, in three parts. Part the first, containing Chinese and English, arranged according to the radicals ; part the second, Chinese and English, arranged alphabetically ; and part the third, English and Chinese.
Seite 197 - PLATE — char6. — I refer this term to charu, from the root char, ' to eat,' signifying ' an oblation of rice, barley, and pulse, boiled with butter and milk for presentation to the gods or manes; and the vessel in which such an oblation is prepared.
Seite xix - Jewish Antiquities ; or a course of lectures on the Three First Books of Godwin's Moses and Aaron : to which is annexed a dissertation on the Hebrew language,
Seite 145 - THE -ZINCALI ; or, AN ACCOUNT OF THE GYPSIES OF SPAIN, with an original Collection of their Songs and Poetry, and a copious Dictionary of their Language, by GEORGE BORROW, late Agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society in Spain, in two volumes.
Seite v - Edition, To which is now added an Account of the Author's Journey to the Banks of Euphrates at Beer, and to the Country of Mesopotamia.
Seite 262 - minstrels', who recited 'songs' at 'festivals', and they seem to have had alphabetical 'characters' written with a style on palmyra leaves. A bundle of those leaves was called 'a book' ; they acknowledged the existence of God, whom they styled 'ko', or king— a realistic title little known to orthodox Hinduism: They erected to his honour a 'temple', which they called Ko-il, God's-house; They had 'laws' and 'customs', but no 'lawyers' or judges; Marriage existed among them.
Seite 335 - Pratic,akhya here lays down with entire correctness the distinction between surd and sonant sounds, which consists in the different nature of the material furnished in the two classes to the mouth organs by the lungs and throat : in the one class it is mere breath, simple unintonated air ; in the other class, it is breath made sonant by the vocal chords on its passage through the throat, and thus converted into sound.