S« and yt, of which laft it is very difficult to afcertain the precife meaning : but it certainly has a meaning ; and a man much converfant in the Attic writers will defiderate it, if it be any where wanting. Of the Origin and Progress of Language - Seite 179von James Burnet - 1774 - 590 SeitenEingeschränkte Leseprobe - Über dieses Buch
| Lord James Burnett Monboddo - 1774 - 614 Seiten
...emphafis and figni^ ficancy to it, which it would not otherwife have. Of this kind are l» and ye, of which laft it is very difficult to afcertain the...accordingly H. Stephen has often fupplied it, where, in the M^ it has fallen out. This abundance of conjunctions and particles is, in my opinion, one of the greatefl... | |
| George Isaac Huntingford (bp. of Hereford.) - 1806 - 306 Seiten
...of which laft it i^éty difficult to afcertain a preciie meaning; but it certainly has a meaning 5 and a man much converfant in the Attic writers will defiderate it, if it be any where wanting." SeleEl Sentences front в1(^ d ó «|i¿£T£/>áí. 'tí те овЭ'о? «/*» aXXa xa» s ó «£%о/*£х(£р... | |
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