History in English WordsMethuen & Company Limited, 1926 - 221 pagina's |
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Pagina 43
... exclusive lan- guage of the Court and the law , but , as the blood of the two peoples mingled , the Norman words which were not dropped gradually altered their shapes , developing various ENGLAND BEFORE THE REFORMATIOM 43.
... exclusive lan- guage of the Court and the law , but , as the blood of the two peoples mingled , the Norman words which were not dropped gradually altered their shapes , developing various ENGLAND BEFORE THE REFORMATIOM 43.
Pagina 109
... gradually decanted , either by actual translation or by more indirect methods , into Latin syllables . Thus , side ... gradual importation into the Latin language of the new meanings . For example , at the end of the second century - no ...
... gradually decanted , either by actual translation or by more indirect methods , into Latin syllables . Thus , side ... gradual importation into the Latin language of the new meanings . For example , at the end of the second century - no ...
Pagina 190
Owen Barfield. the very opposite of disparaging . Fiction and romance were gradually recognized as a legitimate and noble expression of the human spirit . Gradually : to Sidney , poetry was still , after Aristotle's definition , " an art ...
Owen Barfield. the very opposite of disparaging . Fiction and romance were gradually recognized as a legitimate and noble expression of the human spirit . Gradually : to Sidney , poetry was still , after Aristotle's definition , " an art ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract abstract laws adjective already ancestors ancient appeared Arabic Aristotle Aryan Aryan races Bacon began called Celtic Celts chapter Christianity Cicero civilization classical common conception consciousness cosmos Crown 8vo Demy 8vo derived describe developed Dictionary divine E. V. LUCAS Edition Egyptian eighteenth century Empire England English language English words eternal etymological Europe example express fact fancy Fcap felt French G. K. CHESTERTON gradually Greece Greek philosophy Greek word human idea Illustrated imagination influence inner world instance intellectual interesting Italiot kind later Latin words living meant mechanical medieval metaphors Middle Ages mind modern meaning mysterious myth mythology nations Nature nineteenth object origin outlook philosophy phrase Plato poetry poets races religion Roman Roman mythology Rome Sanskrit semantic semantic change sense Septuagint seventeenth century Shakespeare sixteenth century soul spirit Teutonic things tion to-day trace translated verb vocabulary writer