An Essay on the Archaeology of Our Popular Phrases, and Nursery Rhymes, Том 2Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Company, 1837 |
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John Bellenden Ker. implication of sense as the travesties do with us . Such are evidently translations from the English , as bearing , in form of words , no relation in the general sense in which they are used , to the special import ...
John Bellenden Ker. implication of sense as the travesties do with us . Such are evidently translations from the English , as bearing , in form of words , no relation in the general sense in which they are used , to the special import ...
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... sense of to insult , to defy , to oppose openly , to behave out- rageously towards . Baeren , beren , is the verb of baer , bere , beyer [ a bear ] , and carries the meaning of both to make the outcry of that animal , and to act like a ...
... sense of to insult , to defy , to oppose openly , to behave out- rageously towards . Baeren , beren , is the verb of baer , bere , beyer [ a bear ] , and carries the meaning of both to make the outcry of that animal , and to act like a ...
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... sense of to insult , to defy , to oppose openly , to behave out- rageously towards . Baeren , beren , is the verb of baer , bere , beyer [ a bear ] , and carries the meaning of both to make the outcry of that animal , and to act like a ...
... sense of to insult , to defy , to oppose openly , to behave out- rageously towards . Baeren , beren , is the verb of baer , bere , beyer [ a bear ] , and carries the meaning of both to make the outcry of that animal , and to act like a ...
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... sense , beyond that of an upstarting , ostentatious , assuming , and consequently humbug display of talk , unless we take monde in the sense of mouthing , grimacing , nor to denote the subject of the oratory it may refer to . The import ...
... sense , beyond that of an upstarting , ostentatious , assuming , and consequently humbug display of talk , unless we take monde in the sense of mouthing , grimacing , nor to denote the subject of the oratory it may refer to . The import ...
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... sense of the term in those cases . Horne Tooke derives the word from the Gothic matyan , matjan , the A. S. metian , in the sense of to eat ; but we do not eat with the mouth , but with the teeth given us to eat and bite ; without these ...
... sense of the term in those cases . Horne Tooke derives the word from the Gothic matyan , matjan , the A. S. metian , in the sense of to eat ; but we do not eat with the mouth , but with the teeth given us to eat and bite ; without these ...
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analogous Anglo-Saxon applied aspirate belongs bend Bije BILDERDIJK bring called CHAUCER chop contracted participle present derives dialect dije dijen direction of sense Doogh Dutch ellipsis etymology evidently explained expression favour fellow female fetch fool formerly spelt French German grete grounded groundedly hand head heart heet heeten Hence herte hold hoon HORNE TOOKE horse HUDIBRAS IBID IDEM ijse implying import intermutating Italian JOHNSON says JOSEPH SCALIGER keye labour language Latin literal form maie meaning mede meê metathesis mind nature never original form pain participle past participle present past participle phrase play potential mood præterite pronounce prosopopoeia quoth regard Saxon schie SHAKSPEARE shrewd sounds Spanish spelt by CHAUCER suspect taele tell term thema ther thing thou TITMOUSE travesty trope turn utter verb whence Wijse word wote
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