Journal, 37±Ç1869 |
µµ¼ º»¹®¿¡¼
64°³ÀÇ °á°ú Áß 1 - 5°³
1 ÆäÀÌÁö
... of collecting materials for a fauna and flora of Western Tibet . Only for a comparatively short time have I been enabled to pay any attention to the fauna of the Cis - Himalayan regions . Thus , when staying last year for about 1.
... of collecting materials for a fauna and flora of Western Tibet . Only for a comparatively short time have I been enabled to pay any attention to the fauna of the Cis - Himalayan regions . Thus , when staying last year for about 1.
2 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Tibet and Central Asia . Others , properly belonging to the Indian tropical fauna , appear almost accidentally ... Tibetan and Central - Asiatic birds , which do not come in winter as low down as the Indian plains , that I undertook to ...
... Tibet and Central Asia . Others , properly belonging to the Indian tropical fauna , appear almost accidentally ... Tibetan and Central - Asiatic birds , which do not come in winter as low down as the Indian plains , that I undertook to ...
3 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Tibet * and Kashmir have been treated in this manner ; for not only are most of these provinces situated to the South of the river Indus , and within the limits of our Indian empire , but the larger number of the birds , which inhabit ...
... Tibet * and Kashmir have been treated in this manner ; for not only are most of these provinces situated to the South of the river Indus , and within the limits of our Indian empire , but the larger number of the birds , which inhabit ...
5 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Tibet in general , it being characterized by an excessive dryness of the atmosphere at all times of the year , by ... Tibetan character . The Kyang , Equus hemi- onus , is very plentifully met with in a wild state ; the Yak , Poephagus ...
... Tibet in general , it being characterized by an excessive dryness of the atmosphere at all times of the year , by ... Tibetan character . The Kyang , Equus hemi- onus , is very plentifully met with in a wild state ; the Yak , Poephagus ...
6 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Tibet . The population as compared with the area , is very small , generally pursuing a nomade life . The people ... Tibetan slopes . In the Sutlej valley itself , only the higher terraces , situated between 6 and 9,000 feet , are ...
... Tibet . The population as compared with the area , is very small , generally pursuing a nomade life . The people ... Tibetan slopes . In the Sutlej valley itself , only the higher terraces , situated between 6 and 9,000 feet , are ...
±âŸ ÃâÆǺ» - ¸ðµÎ º¸±â
ÀÚÁÖ ³ª¿À´Â ´Ü¾î ¹× ±¸¹®
A. M. Scatd Abstract Additional Weight Akbar's Assam Barometer Barometer occurred birds Bulb above Wet Bulb Thermometer Means Burhán Burmese Calcutta Chini clear afterwards compiler complete saturation Computed Mean Dew-point Cubic foot daily Max degree of Humi Dew Point Diff dity Dry Bulb Thermometer Farhang feathers feet force of Vapour Greenwich Constants hills Himalayas hour Hourly Meteorological Observations Hygrometrical elements dependent Inches Indian Karens Khán king Kotegurh likewise the Dry Mean degree Mean Dry Bulb Mean Elastic force Mean Height Mean Wet Bulb Meteorological Observations taken metre Nimbi Noon number of days P. M. Clear P. M. Overcast P. M. Rain Persian Dictionary Persian language Prevailing direction Pu-gán required for complete Rudok Shíráz Slight rain Slightly foggy Solar Radiation species specimens Stratoni Surúrí Surveyor General's Office Sutlej valley tail Tibet Vapour required Vide Vullers Weight of Vapour Wet Bulb Thermometer است او این در فرهنگ که لغات
Àαâ Àο뱸
160 ÆäÀÌÁö - I go to war. I am sent. I go to fight. I am sent. Clothe me with an iron breastplate. Give to me the iron shield. I am not strong. May I take on strength. I am weak. May I attain vigor.
112 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... The king of Burma favoured us early this year with the obliging requisition that we should cede to him Moorshedabad and the provinces to the east of it, which he deigned to say were all natural dependencies of his throne.' And at the time of the disputes on the frontier of Arakan, in 18231824, which led to the war of the two following years, the Governor of Arakan made a similar demand. We may therefore reasonably conclude that at the close of the 1 3th century of the Christian era the kings...
132 ÆäÀÌÁö - Each village, with its scant domain, is an independent State, and every chief a prince ; but now and then a little Napoleon arises, who subdues a kingdom to himself, and builds up- an empire. The dynasties, however, last only with the controlling mind.
164 ÆäÀÌÁö - There is a hint on this subject in Dr. Richardson's account of the red Karens, who, he says, represent themselves as having come from the north west. Malte Brun, too, arguing from the accounts of Marco Polo, confirms this tradition. He concludes, " Thus the country of Caride is the southeast point of Thibet, and perhaps the country of the nation of the Cariaines ; which is spread over Ava.
xxvii ÆäÀÌÁö - Abstract of the results of the hourly meteorological observations taken at the Surveyor General's Office, Calcutta, in the month of April 1855.
149 ÆäÀÌÁö - Lord of heaven and earth, God of the mountains and hills. I have destroyed the productiveness of the country. Do not be angry with me, do not hate me ; but have mercy on me and pity me. I now repair the mountains. I heal the hills and the streams with my hands. May there be no failure of crops, no unsuccessful labor, or unfortunate efforts in my country. Let them be dissipated on the distant horizon. Make the paddy fruitful and the rice abundant. Cause the vegetables to flourish.
91 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... this religion are called the thirty great Arees and their disciples. Their doctrines are represented as a complete subversion of all moral law. They taught, it is said, whosoever shall commit murder he is freed from his sins by repeating a prayer or invocation ; whosoever shall kill his parents, by repeating a prayer he is freed from the punishment due to the five greatest sins.
163 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... and having drunk it they said, "Now that we have made peace, if any one breaks the engagement, if he does not act truly, but goes to war again and stirs up the feud again, may the spear eat his breast, the musket his bowels, the sword his head; may the dog devour him, may the hog devour him, may the stone devour him!
67 ÆäÀÌÁö - Bijipur, wished to enter into a matrimonial alliance with Akbar, and offered his daughter to Prince Danyal. To settle matters, Akbar despatched the Mir to the Dekhan, who, in AH 1013, after making, near Pattan, the necessary preparations for the marriage feast, handed over the bride to Prince Danyal. After this he repaired to Agra,:]: in order to lay the tribute and the presents before the emperor, the best oi all which up to that time had come from the Dokhan.
155 ÆäÀÌÁö - The visitor next kills a hog or fowl, and performs the same rites on the other. On consulting thy fowl's bones, he says, " If the fowl's bones are unfavourable we will die separate, we will go separate, we will work separate, we will not visit each other's houses, we will not go up each other's steps, we will never see each other but for a short time." If the response is favourable, the two have entered into the relations of Do, and consider themselves pledged friends, bound to help each other as...