Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & IrelandRoyal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland., 1888 With appendices. |
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Página 18
... regard to it is incorrect , the word can only mean ' female slaves . ' Translate , ' I appointed ( him ) governor of the land of Igas . ' · • XLVI . 16. Perhaps we should read veli - dubi ' I collected . ' Ulis'the other ' follows ...
... regard to it is incorrect , the word can only mean ' female slaves . ' Translate , ' I appointed ( him ) governor of the land of Igas . ' · • XLVI . 16. Perhaps we should read veli - dubi ' I collected . ' Ulis'the other ' follows ...
Página 22
... regard it as formed from suis possession ' by the adjectival suffix si like nuśi royal ' from nus ' a king , ' and consequently as literally signifying ' the property ' or Téμevos of the god . 3. Since in LXV . 10 the ideograph ...
... regard it as formed from suis possession ' by the adjectival suffix si like nuśi royal ' from nus ' a king , ' and consequently as literally signifying ' the property ' or Téμevos of the god . 3. Since in LXV . 10 the ideograph ...
Página 32
... regard ina as the fuller form of which na is a contraction , or as a compound . " ALPHABETICAL LIST OF NEW WORDS AND CORRECTED EXPLANATIONS . Abili - dubi ( for abida - dubi ) . ' I burnt , ' literally ' I set on fire , ' from du to ...
... regard ina as the fuller form of which na is a contraction , or as a compound . " ALPHABETICAL LIST OF NEW WORDS AND CORRECTED EXPLANATIONS . Abili - dubi ( for abida - dubi ) . ' I burnt , ' literally ' I set on fire , ' from du to ...
Página 49
... regard to India ; and suggestions regarding them , even although they should ultimately be found to have pointed in the wrong direction , may yet be useful in many ways ; such speculations may call the attention of men in India to the ...
... regard to India ; and suggestions regarding them , even although they should ultimately be found to have pointed in the wrong direction , may yet be useful in many ways ; such speculations may call the attention of men in India to the ...
Página 73
... regards area , was probably the widest Empire the world has ever seen - an Empire that the conquests of himself and his sons finally extended from the Yellow Sea to the Crimea , and from what is now called the Kirghiz Steppes to ...
... regards area , was probably the widest Empire the world has ever seen - an Empire that the conquests of himself and his sons finally extended from the Yellow Sea to the Crimea , and from what is now called the Kirghiz Steppes to ...
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Pasajes populares
Página 77 - Our doubts are traitors, And make us lose the good we oft might win, By fearing to attempt.
Página 163 - Joseph.— China's Place in Philology. An Attempt to show that the Languages of Europe and Asia have a common origin. Crown Svo, los. 6d. The Evolution of the Chinese Language. As Exemplifying the Origin and Growth of Human Speech.
Página 132 - ... modes of thought, produced a comprehensive description of Indian civilization, always struggling to grasp its very essence, and depicting it with due lights and shades, as an impartial spectator." The title of the book tells its own story : " An accurate description of all the categories of Indian thought, as -well those •which are admissible, as those which must be rejected...
Página 142 - ... as when an arrow is shot at a mark, it parteth the air, which immediately cometh together again; so that a man cannot know where it went through...
Página 305 - Report on the search for Sanskrit MSS. in the Bombay Presidency during the year 1882-83.
Página 32 - V. The Poetry of Mohamed Rabadan, of Arragon. By the Right Hon. Lord Stanley of Alderley.— VI.
Página 116 - And after the winter was over, having been well fed, well clothed, loaded with handsome presents, and supplied by the king with horses and travelling expenses, we proceeded to Armalec (the capital) of the Middle Empire. There we built a church, bought a piece of ground, dug wells, sung masses, and baptized several; preaching freely and openly, notwithstanding the fact that only the year before the bishop and six other Minor Friars had there undergone for Christ's sake a glorious martyrdom, illustrated...
Página 58 - Veda 134 to a Sudra. He roams about in dreadful cemeteries, attended by hosts of ghosts and sprites, like a madman, naked, with dishevelled hair, laughing, weeping, bathed in the ashes of funeral piles, wearing a garland of dead men's [skulls], and ornaments of human bones...
Página 278 - They had also a notion that a sense of shame implied sin, so that if there were no sin in the world there would be no shame. Hence they argued rather illogically that to get rid of clothes was to get rid of sin ; and...
Página 118 - By J. Muir, Esq. — III. Five hundred questions on the Social Condition of the Natives of Bengal.