Of the Origin and Progress of Language, Band 2J. Balfour, 1774 - 494 Seiten |
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Seite iv
... invented . -The nature of that difco- very , 3. General plan of this fecond part of the work . - Analysis of the ... invent- ing them . - The nature and different kinds of them , 6. Of the article , and the various ufes of it , 7. Of the ...
... invented . -The nature of that difco- very , 3. General plan of this fecond part of the work . - Analysis of the ... invent- ing them . - The nature and different kinds of them , 6. Of the article , and the various ufes of it , 7. Of the ...
Seite x
... invent- ed by Bishop Wilkins , 14 . That a language of art must have been the work of men of art , and formed upon a regular plan . - The fame art neceffary to preferve lan- guage 401 407 420 426 449 Ch . guage that is required to form ...
... invent- ed by Bishop Wilkins , 14 . That a language of art must have been the work of men of art , and formed upon a regular plan . - The fame art neceffary to preferve lan- guage 401 407 420 426 449 Ch . guage that is required to form ...
Seite 4
... invented ; and as the gramma- rian profeffes to teach us the practice of an art which distinguishes us chiefly from the brute creation , and not the practice only , which children have , and the most illiterate of the vulgar , and even ...
... invented ; and as the gramma- rian profeffes to teach us the practice of an art which distinguishes us chiefly from the brute creation , and not the practice only , which children have , and the most illiterate of the vulgar , and even ...
Seite 5
... may have ferved the purposes of communica- tion in a very narrow fphere of life , with few wants , and as few arts to fupply those wants , must have been almost entirely art- lefs . Ch . 1. lefs . If therefore language was invented.
... may have ferved the purposes of communica- tion in a very narrow fphere of life , with few wants , and as few arts to fupply those wants , must have been almost entirely art- lefs . Ch . 1. lefs . If therefore language was invented.
Seite 6
Lord James Burnett Monboddo. Ch . 1. lefs . If therefore language was invented , there must have been a first and a fecond language ; the one altogether rude and art- lefs , the other formed by rules of art , and the work of men of art ...
Lord James Burnett Monboddo. Ch . 1. lefs . If therefore language was invented , there must have been a first and a fecond language ; the one altogether rude and art- lefs , the other formed by rules of art , and the work of men of art ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent action acute accent alfo alſo analyſis antient Ariftotle becauſe befides betwixt cafe called Chineſe Cicero compofition confidered confonants Cratylus Demofthenes denotes derived diftinction diphthong diſtinguiſhed divifion duads Engliſh exiſtence expreffed expreffion faid fame fcience fecond fenfe fentence ferved feveral fhall fhew fhewn fhort fhould fignifies fimple firft firſt fome formed fpeaker fpeaking fpecies fpeech ftill ftyle fubftance fubject fuch fuppofe fyftem fyllables greateſt Greek language guage invention itſelf kind laft laſt Latin learned leaſt lefs letters likewife meaſure mentioned moft moſt mufic muft muſt nature neceffary noun obferved paffage paſt perfon philofophical Plato Plutarch pofition prefent preferved prepofitions profe pronounced pronunciation purpoſe racters reafon refpect rhythm ſay ſpeak ſtudy tenfe thefe themſelves Theodorus Gaza ther theſe things thofe thoſe tion underſtand underſtood uſe verb verfe verſe vowel words καὶ τῆς τὸ τῶν
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 560 - Looks through the horizontal misty air Shorn of his beams, or from behind the moon, In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight sheds On half the nations, and with fear of change Perplexes monarchs.
Seite 394 - IF e'er in thy fight I found -favour, Apollo, Defend me from all the difafters which follow : From the knaves and the fools, and the fops of the time, From the drudges in profe, and the triflers in rhyme : From the patch-work and toils of the royal fack-bibber, Thofe dead birth-day odes, and the farces of GIBBER : From fervile attendance on men in high places...
Seite 560 - Stood like a tow'r ; his form had yet not loft All her original brightnefs, nor appear'd Lefs than Arch-Angel ruin'd, and th...
Seite 555 - For dignity compos'd and high exploit : But all was falfe and hollow ; though his Tongue Dropt Manna, and could make the worfe appear The...
Seite 188 - ... the feveral parts of the language together, than the language itfelf, are derived from verbs, or are derivatives of any ' kind ; but he will underftand, that I mean the the names of things,, which are properly the words of a language.
Seite 298 - I appeal to them, whether they can perceive any dif" ference of tone betwixt the accented and unaccented fyllable " of any word? And if there be none, then is the mufic of our " language, in this refpect, nothing better than the mufic of a " drum, in which we perceive no difference except that of
Seite 353 - Attic dialect, and which diftinguifhed more perhaps than any thing ielfe the Attic from the other Greek writers. This beauty the Romans, particularly in later times, imitated very much } for not only Horace is full of it, but even in Virgil's eclogues, where one fhould have expected more fimplicity of ftyle, there is a great deal of it to be found.
Seite 179 - They are commonly reckoned of that fpecies of conjunctions, called adircrfative. But it is only difference they mark, C. 14, not oppofition ; and the /«' that precedes, as it always does, does no more than let you know that fomething different is to follow, but which has a connection with what went before. The Greeks too have many particles, which appear to a perfon not well acquainted with the language to be mere expletives.
Seite 386 - I think, more than any other of our poets, fometimes breaks the meafure of the verfe altogether ; as in this line: " Burnt after him to the bottomlefs pit." Nor are we to imagine, that Milton did this through negligence, or as not knowing the nature of the verfe he ufed ; but it was to give a variety to his verfe, and fome relief to the ear, which might other-wife be tired with .the conftant repetition of the fame meafure. It is for this reafon that we have, both in Homer and Virgil, irregularities...
Seite 227 - ... seems first to have led to the invention of symbols, or marks, for mental conceptions. This invention must have taken place much about the time that men began to reform the barbarous jargon they first spoke, and form a language ; for which purpose, the knowledge of elementary sounds and their powers, was absolutely necessary.
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