Journal of the American Oriental Society, כרך 9American Oriental Society., 1871 "Proceedings" or "Select minutes of meetings" are included in each volume (except volumes 3, 12). |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 67
עמוד 3
... stand in the near- est possible relation to one another , having almost all their errors , omissions , and orthographical peculiarities in common , and only by comparatively rare and inconspicuous differences proved not to be copied the ...
... stand in the near- est possible relation to one another , having almost all their errors , omissions , and orthographical peculiarities in common , and only by comparatively rare and inconspicuous differences proved not to be copied the ...
עמוד 5
... stands in place of a single stroke of interpunction , and a full stop in place of a double stroke . The general method of transliteration is the same with that which I have hitherto used in the Journal of the Ameri- can Oriental Society ...
... stands in place of a single stroke of interpunction , and a full stop in place of a double stroke . The general method of transliteration is the same with that which I have hitherto used in the Journal of the Ameri- can Oriental Society ...
עמוד 23
... stands for the ending of the nominative case , in the dual and plural as well as the singu- lar . He quotes in illustration five rules : xiv.5 exemplifies a singular increment ; vii.1 , a singular altered element ; v.19 , a singular ...
... stands for the ending of the nominative case , in the dual and plural as well as the singu- lar . He quotes in illustration five rules : xiv.5 exemplifies a singular increment ; vii.1 , a singular altered element ; v.19 , a singular ...
עמוד 26
... stands here as representative of the accusative case in any number ; but the two examples he gives ( v.38 and vii.1 ) are both of them such as the rule might strictly apply to without any such extension of its meaning . पूर्व ...
... stands here as representative of the accusative case in any number ; but the two examples he gives ( v.38 and vii.1 ) are both of them such as the rule might strictly apply to without any such extension of its meaning . पूर्व ...
עמוד 48
... stand The general value of this rule is that of a limitation to the last but one ; it points out a class of cases in which a rule given for a particular passage is not limited to that passage , but also acts elsewhere ; in which ...
... stand The general value of this rule is that of a limitation to the last but one ; it points out a class of cases in which a rule given for a particular passage is not limited to that passage , but also acts elsewhere ; in which ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
abhi accent acute agne anusvára ápadyate asmin asya atha avagraha ayam bhajate bhavati chapter Chinese circumflex citation cited combination commentary commentator commentator's compound consonant counter-example enclitic eshu etad eteshu evam evampara iti kim example final G. M. O. omit G. M. om G. M. omit given gives grahane Haven illustration implied iti kim ity arthaḥ ity atra last two words last word letter lingual lupyate manuscripts mute namely nasal note to Ath occurs omit the last pada pada-text paro passage pracaya pragraha Prâtiçâkhya preceding rule Prof quoted Rig-Veda Rik Pr samhita sandhi Sanhitâ Sanskrit sati semivowel sonant sounds specified spirant surd sváhá svarita syát syllable Tâittirîya tasmád tasya tatha tion tone treatise ucyate utterance Veda viii visarjaniya vowel W. D. Whitney yaḥ yama yatha
קטעים בולטים
עמוד xlvi - ... sulphur were in those of the West. It is of less significance to add that many other substances were common to both schools, than to note the remarkable coincidence that, in Chinese as in European alchemy, the names of the two principal reagents are used in a mystical sense. 6. Both schools, or at least individuals in both schools, held the doctrine of a cycle of changes, in the course of which the precious metals revert to their baser elements.
עמוד 138 - ... youth's own loss), and finally, "unus'd beauty" (the whole tragedy— of beauty, of the poet, and of the youth— in the hour of death). Thus this sonnet, which in its absence of visual imagery has little attraction for the hasty reader, reveals itself to analysis as having an intricate beauty of form to which it would be hard to find a parallel in the work of any other poet. Though Sonnet...
עמוד xlvi - Indeed, the characters ttmg for the germ, and fai for the matrix, which constantly occur in the writings of Chinese alchemists, might be taken for the translation of terms in the vocabulary of the Western school, if their higher antiquity did not forbid the hypothesis. 5. The ends in view being the same, the means by which they were pursued were nearly identical — mercury and lead being as conspicuous in the laboratories of the East as mercury and sulphur were in those of the West. It is of less...
עמוד xlvi - ... 1. The study of alchemy had been in full vigor in China for at least six centuries, before it made its appearance in Europe. It did not appear in Europe until the fourth century, when intercourse with the far East had become somewhat frequent It appeared first at Byzantium and Alexandria...
עמוד lxii - The Greeks distinguished one syllable in each word by sounding its vowel on a higher key ; this higher key was represented by the acute accent. The ordinary lower key was not represented in writing. But when it followed the higher key on the same long vowel, it was represented by the grave accent, which then united with the acute to form the circumflex. And when a high-tone ultima, followed by other words in close connection, dropped down to a lower key, it was written with a grave accent instead...