The Journal of the Indian Archipelago and Eastern Asia, 9권Printed at the Mission Press, 1855 |
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13 페이지
... Indonesian languages - is similar to the Dravirian , but it is more archaic , more complete and less concreted . The different elements are more numerous and more freely and larly combinable . In the Australian system we find not only ...
... Indonesian languages - is similar to the Dravirian , but it is more archaic , more complete and less concreted . The different elements are more numerous and more freely and larly combinable . In the Australian system we find not only ...
14 페이지
... Indonesia the North Ultraindian form is perhaps found in Sunda aing , but this may be a Niha - Polynesian prefix with the true pronominal root elided . The Timor ani and Kissa ba - nian are probably connected with it . The Sumba nyu ...
... Indonesia the North Ultraindian form is perhaps found in Sunda aing , but this may be a Niha - Polynesian prefix with the true pronominal root elided . The Timor ani and Kissa ba - nian are probably connected with it . The Sumba nyu ...
30 페이지
... Indonesian languages . In the Africo - Semitic prepositional languages definitives are com- mon as postfixes , and they occur in very archaic words , as in pronouns . Substantive terms are , to a great extent , composed of a root and a ...
... Indonesian languages . In the Africo - Semitic prepositional languages definitives are com- mon as postfixes , and they occur in very archaic words , as in pronouns . Substantive terms are , to a great extent , composed of a root and a ...
169 페이지
... Indonesian races , with the undoubted spread of Vindya - Ultraindian vocables through their instrumentality to the east and south , led me to surmise that the words common to the Mon - Anam and the Kol vocabularies , had been carried by ...
... Indonesian races , with the undoubted spread of Vindya - Ultraindian vocables through their instrumentality to the east and south , led me to surmise that the words common to the Mon - Anam and the Kol vocabularies , had been carried by ...
194 페이지
... Indonesian languages than the South Dravirian . The glossarial and other affinities between the Asonesian formations and the Dravirian will be separately examined . It is sufficient here to indicate their existence and extent in proof ...
... Indonesian languages than the South Dravirian . The glossarial and other affinities between the Asonesian formations and the Dravirian will be separately examined . It is sufficient here to indicate their existence and extent in proof ...
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1st pronoun 3rd pronoun affinities African Anam Ananda appears archaic Arian Asia Asiatic Asonesian Australian Bencoolen Bhotian Bodo Brahui Budha buffalo Burman Caucasian Chinese civilisation common comp connected definitive derived Dhimal dialects Dravirian Dravirian terms Draviro-Australian dual Dutch eastern European flexional formation Galla Gangetic Garo glossarial Gond Gyarung hair Horpa India Indo-European Indonesian Iranian islands Karnataka Kiranti Kwan-hwa labial languages Lepcha Limbu Malacca Malagasy Malay Male Manyak Mon-Anam N. E. Asian Naga native Nats Newar Niban numerals original Ostiak paha particles person phonetic phonology Pinang plural poss possessive postf postfix prefixes preserved prevalent probably pron pronominal quinary race Raffles Rahans Rajah remarked Resident Rhio root Samoiede Sanskrit Scythic Semitic Semitico-African Semitico-Libyan sibilant Singapore Singpho Sir Stamford slave South Dravirian Sultan tahils Takpa Tamil Telugu Thariputra Thochu Tibetan Tibeto-Ultraindian tion traits trees tribes Turkish Ugrian Ultraindian Uraon variation vocables vocabularies vowel words Yeniseian