The Journal of the Indian Archipelago and Eastern Asia, 9권Printed at the Mission Press, 1855 |
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90개의 결과 중 11 - 15개
191 페이지
... tribes were more barbar- ous and more divided . The progress of the great civilised nations and their mutual glossarial interpenetration and assimilation , must have been attended , as in other cases , with the partial obliteration of ...
... tribes were more barbar- ous and more divided . The progress of the great civilised nations and their mutual glossarial interpenetration and assimilation , must have been attended , as in other cases , with the partial obliteration of ...
192 페이지
... tribes . A gradual and very great glossarial divergency is consistent with the retention of the leading characters of the formation in phonology , ideology and even in glossary . The Indo - European , the Niha - Polynesian , the Tibeto ...
... tribes . A gradual and very great glossarial divergency is consistent with the retention of the leading characters of the formation in phonology , ideology and even in glossary . The Indo - European , the Niha - Polynesian , the Tibeto ...
193 페이지
... tribes and vocabularies of the Lower Ganges were more or less changed from era to era by the intru- sion of other Dravirian tribes from the interior , and by foreign influences transmitted from Irania . In later periods they were ...
... tribes and vocabularies of the Lower Ganges were more or less changed from era to era by the intru- sion of other Dravirian tribes from the interior , and by foreign influences transmitted from Irania . In later periods they were ...
194 페이지
... tribes like the Simangs and Australians roamed in the Sunderbunds and crept along the creeks on rafts or skins , to the period when civilised Dravirians and Ultraindo - Dravirians navigated the coasts in paravus and spread their ...
... tribes like the Simangs and Australians roamed in the Sunderbunds and crept along the creeks on rafts or skins , to the period when civilised Dravirians and Ultraindo - Dravirians navigated the coasts in paravus and spread their ...
198 페이지
... tribes . The Cannadi has a greater and the Tamil a less proportion of Tadbhavam terms than the other dialects ; but in the latter all Sanscrit words are liable to greater variation than is produced by the mere difference of termination ...
... tribes . The Cannadi has a greater and the Tamil a less proportion of Tadbhavam terms than the other dialects ; but in the latter all Sanscrit words are liable to greater variation than is produced by the mere difference of termination ...
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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