... wild-growing language and religion ; it had no history, it left no history, and it is therefore incapable of that peculiar scientific treatment which has been found applicable to a study of the languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic,... アイヌ・英・和辭典 - Page 14by John Batchelor - 1905 - 684 pagesFull view - About this book
 | American periodicals - 1870 - 878 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - Religion and science - 1870 - 80 pages
...languages and' the religious of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
 | 1870 - 844 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - Buddhism - 1872 - 338 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - Mythology - 1873 - 454 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - Natural theology - 1873 - 446 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing more than three families of speech—or rather two, for the Turanian can hardly be called a family, in the strict sense of that... | |
 | John Francis Arundell (12th baron Arundell of Wardour.) - Bible and science - 1879 - 196 pages
...conditions of the statement. I will again recur to the pages of Mr. Max Miiller: ' People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing more than three families of speech—or rather two, for the Turanian can hardly he called a family, in the strict sense of that... | |
 | American Philological Association - Philology - 1881 - 366 pages
...adverts to the subject thus : " People wonder why the students of language [really, himself alone] have not succeeded in establishing more than three...two, for the Turanian can hardly be called a family," until the Chinese shall be fitted with a place in it. " The reason why scholars have discovered no... | |
 | James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - Authors - 1870 - 876 pages
...languages and the religions of the Chinese, the Semitic, and the Aryan nations. People wonder why the students of language have not succeeded in establishing...called a family, in the strict sense of that word, until it has been fully proved that Chinese forms the centre of the two Turanian branches, the North... | |
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