Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 53;Volume 116John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1891 |
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Página 2
... reason- ing of similar cogency to that employed about things biological . Thus , the former existence of a body of relatively uniform dialects , which may be called primitive Aryan , may be added to the stock of definitely acquired ...
... reason- ing of similar cogency to that employed about things biological . Thus , the former existence of a body of relatively uniform dialects , which may be called primitive Aryan , may be added to the stock of definitely acquired ...
Página 4
... reason for the physical differences between a high - caste Hindoo and a Dravidian , except the Aryan blood in the veins of the former ; and the strength of the infusion is probably quite as great in some Hindoos as in some English ...
... reason for the physical differences between a high - caste Hindoo and a Dravidian , except the Aryan blood in the veins of the former ; and the strength of the infusion is probably quite as great in some Hindoos as in some English ...
Página 6
... reason to believe that the brunet broad - heads , now met with in cen- tral France and in the west central Euro- pean highlands , have inhabited the same region , not only throughout the historical period , but long before it commenced ...
... reason to believe that the brunet broad - heads , now met with in cen- tral France and in the west central Euro- pean highlands , have inhabited the same region , not only throughout the historical period , but long before it commenced ...
Página 18
... reason to suppose that the genus Homo was confined to Europe in the pleistocene age ; it is much more probable that this , like other mammalian genera of that period , was spread over a large extent of the surface of the globe . At that ...
... reason to suppose that the genus Homo was confined to Europe in the pleistocene age ; it is much more probable that this , like other mammalian genera of that period , was spread over a large extent of the surface of the globe . At that ...
Página 26
... reason I can- not say , furnishes but little ivory to the market ; so little , in fact , that the Chinese , Japanese , and Indians have to import ivory from Africa for the hundred and one grace- ful artistic objects which they ...
... reason I can- not say , furnishes but little ivory to the market ; so little , in fact , that the Chinese , Japanese , and Indians have to import ivory from Africa for the hundred and one grace- ful artistic objects which they ...
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353 | |
417 | |
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690 | |
716 | |
758 | |
775 | |
809 | |
811 | |
837 | |
845 | |
849 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Africa AGNES Algol animals Ansairee Aristotle artist Aryan asked beautiful better Bordon BRAND British Buddhism called Celt century Christian Circassian civilization crime Crispi dark death doubt Druses ence England English Europe European existence eyes fact father feel Finland Finnish Finnish marks France Freemasonry girl give Government hand heart human interest Italy Kaffir kind king kraal labor lady land less light live look Lopatine Lord Salisbury McKinley Tariff means ment mind nation native nature never night once Pamphilius passed patient perhaps persons poor present question race religion result round Russian seems slaves South South Africa spirit story strike Tembuland things thou thought tion Tiryns told trade true Umtata Voltaire whole woman words write Yambuya young Zanzibar