Anthropology: An Introduction to the Study of Man and CivilizationAppleton, 1891 - 448 pagini |
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Pagina 9
... comparing the set of Romance languages , to infer that such a language must have existed to give rise to them all , though no doubt such a reconstruction of Latin would give but a meagre notion , either of its stock of words or its gram ...
... comparing the set of Romance languages , to infer that such a language must have existed to give rise to them all , though no doubt such a reconstruction of Latin would give but a meagre notion , either of its stock of words or its gram ...
Pagina 10
... comparing whole sentences . Philologists have to depend on less perfect resemblances , but such are sufficient when not only words from the dictionary correspond in the two languages , but also these are worked up into actual speech by ...
... comparing whole sentences . Philologists have to depend on less perfect resemblances , but such are sufficient when not only words from the dictionary correspond in the two languages , but also these are worked up into actual speech by ...
Pagina 11
... comparing its descendant languages . Some of these have come down to us in forms which are extremely ancient , as antiquity goes in our limited chronology . The sacred books of India and Persia have preserved the Sanskrit and Zend ...
... comparing its descendant languages . Some of these have come down to us in forms which are extremely ancient , as antiquity goes in our limited chronology . The sacred books of India and Persia have preserved the Sanskrit and Zend ...
Pagina 40
... comparing their skeletons , it will be seen that in any scale of nature or scheme of creation these animals must be placed in somewhat close relation to man . No competent anatomist who has examined the bodily structure of these apes ...
... comparing their skeletons , it will be seen that in any scale of nature or scheme of creation these animals must be placed in somewhat close relation to man . No competent anatomist who has examined the bodily structure of these apes ...
Pagina 41
... between quadruped and biped . But only man is so formed that , using his feet to carry him , he has his hands free for their special work . In comparing man with the lower animals , it is II . ] 4I MAN AND OTHER ANIMALS .
... between quadruped and biped . But only man is so formed that , using his feet to carry him , he has his hands free for their special work . In comparing man with the lower animals , it is II . ] 4I MAN AND OTHER ANIMALS .
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Anthropology: An Introduction to the Study of Man and Civilization Edward Burnett Tylor Vizualizare completă - 1893 |
Anthropology: An Introduction to the Study of Man and Civilization Edward Burnett Tylor Vizualizare fragmente - 1899 |
Anthropology: An Introduction to the Study of Man and Civilization Edward Burnett Tylor Vizualizare fragmente - 1899 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
African American ancestors ancient Egypt ancient Egyptian animals apes appears Aryan Assyrian Australian barbarians barbaric beasts become belong Beni Hassan body Botocudo Brahmans bronze called carried celt chimpanzee Chinese civilization colour culture curious deity early earth Egypt Egyptian hieroglyphics England English Europe European fire flint forest give Greek hair hand hatchets Herodotus Hindu human idea imitated implements India Indians invention iron islands kind known land language Latin learnt living look Malay man's mankind means metal mind modern nations native natural negro noticed origin Phoenician Phoenician alphabet plainly primitive quadrupeds reckoned religion Roman round rude tribes Sanskrit savage seems seen SHELDON AMOS signs skin skull souls sound South America South Sea Islanders spear spear-head stages stick stone age Tatar thought traces verb warrior weapons whole wild words writing
Pasaje populare
Pagina 402 - The fathers shall not be put to death for the children, neither shall the children be put to death for the fathers: every man shall be put to death for his own sin.
Pagina 297 - The square described on the hypothenuse of a rightangled triangle is equal to the sum of the squares described on the other two sides.
Pagina 266 - How wonderful is Death, Death, and his brother Sleep ! One, pale as yonder waning moon With lips of lurid blue ; The other, rosy as the morn When throned on ocean's wave It blushes o'er the world : Yet both so passing wonderful...
Pagina 12 - On the whole it appears that wherever there are found elaborate arts, abstruse knowledge, complex institutions, these are results of gradual development from an earlier, simpler, and ruder state of life. No stage of civilization comes into existence spontaneously, but grows or is developed out of the stage before it. This is the great principle which every scholar must lay firm hold of, if he intends to understand either the world he lives in or the history of the past.