| John Horne Tooke - 1805 - 580 páginas
...thofe additional meanings are intended to be added occafionally to all thofe nouns or verbs. Thefe terminations are all explicable, and ought all to be explained ; or there will be no end of fuch fantaftical writers as this Mr. Harris, who takes fuftian for philofophy. In the Greek verb l-tveu... | |
| 1806 - 502 páginas
...is it, and in three letters. But those three letters contain three words; two verbs and a pronoun. All those common terminations, in any language, of...are themselves separate words with distinct meanings : which are therefore added to the different nouns or verbs, because those additional meanings are... | |
| John Horne Tooke - 1807 - 506 páginas
...is it, and in three letters. But those three letters contain three words; two verbs and a pronoun. All those common terminations, in any language, of...are themselves separate words with distinct meanings : which are therefore added to the different nouns or verbs, because those additional meanings are... | |
| William Nicholson - 1809 - 700 páginas
...support from the discoveries of Mr. H. Tooke. He states it without any limit, in the following manner : " All those common terminations, in any language, of...that language equally partake (under the notion of dednt.non or conjugation) are themselves separate words, with distinct meanings ; which are therefore... | |
| William Nicholson - 1809 - 752 páginas
...support from the discoveries of Mr. H. Tooke. He states it without any limit, in the following manner: " All those common terminations, in any language, of...that language equally partake (under the notion of dedensum or conjugation) are themselves separate words, with distinct meanings ; which are therefore... | |
| William Nicholson - 1819 - 394 páginas
...support from the discoveries of Mr. H. Tooke. He states it without any limit, in the following manner : " All those common terminations, in any language, of...in that language equally partake (under the notion ofdecteruion or conjugation) arc themselves separate words, with distinct meanings ; which, are therefore... | |
| John Horne Tooke - 1829 - 628 páginas
...is it, and in three letters. But those three letters contain three words; two Verbs and a Pronoun. All those common terminations, in any language, of...are themselves separate words with distinct meanings : which are therefore added to the different nouns or verbs, because those additional meanings are... | |
| John Horne Tooke - 1840 - 806 páginas
...three words ; two Verbs and a Pronoun. All those common terminations, in any language, of which nil Nouns or Verbs in that language equally partake (under...are themselves separate words with distinct meanings : which are therefore added to the different nouns or verbs, because those additional meanings are... | |
| Edward Johnson - 1842 - 584 páginas
...because those additional circumstances are intended to be added occasionally to all those nouns or verbs. These terminations are all explicable, and ought all to be explained, or there will be no end of such phantastical writers as this Mr. Han-is, who takes fustian for philosophy. " In the Greek verb I-enai... | |
| John Stoddart - 1854 - 340 páginas
...ethnography, the connection of languages. Mr. Tooke, in the second volume of his Diversions of Purley, says, " All those common terminations, in any language, of...themselves separate words with distinct meanings." On the strength of this assertion, credit has been given to him as the discoverer of a great and incontrovertible... | |
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