The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General Literature, 11. köideThomas Spencer Baynes, William Robertson Smith R.S. Peale, 1890 |
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Page 34
... According to Catholic theology , where the body or the blood of Christ is , there , by virtue of the hypostatic union , are His soul and His divinity . That the Graal , such being its contents , should be marvellous- divine - mysterious ...
... According to Catholic theology , where the body or the blood of Christ is , there , by virtue of the hypostatic union , are His soul and His divinity . That the Graal , such being its contents , should be marvellous- divine - mysterious ...
Page 36
... according to the article in Ducange , seems to be of Armorican origin ; anyhow M. Fauriel has not proved its use in the sense of cup at a period earlier than the rise of the Graal legend . 4. The spread and ascendency to which the Graal ...
... according to the article in Ducange , seems to be of Armorican origin ; anyhow M. Fauriel has not proved its use in the sense of cup at a period earlier than the rise of the Graal legend . 4. The spread and ascendency to which the Graal ...
Page 39
... according to which the stems however , are subordinated to the words expressing the main were arranged in a sentence . In other words , the relations ideas intended to be in relation to one another . The de- of grammar were denoted ...
... according to which the stems however , are subordinated to the words expressing the main were arranged in a sentence . In other words , the relations ideas intended to be in relation to one another . The de- of grammar were denoted ...
Page 40
... according to M. Hovelacque , the change of a into i or u in the parent - Aryan symbolized a change of meaning from passive to active . This symbolic use of the vowels , which is the purest application of the principle of flexion , is ...
... according to M. Hovelacque , the change of a into i or u in the parent - Aryan symbolized a change of meaning from passive to active . This symbolic use of the vowels , which is the purest application of the principle of flexion , is ...
Page 43
... according to the will of those who use them , and added to the oropa or " noun , " and the pñua or " verb , " the oúvdeoμos or " particle . " He also introduced the term Twois , " case , " to denote any flexion whatsoever . He further ...
... according to the will of those who use them , and added to the oropa or " noun , " and the pñua or " verb , " the oúvdeoμos or " particle . " He also introduced the term Twois , " case , " to denote any flexion whatsoever . He further ...
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16th century afterwards ancient appears appointed Athenian Athens Attic Attica barrel became bishop body Boeotia bore born breech breech-loading British Byzantine called century character chief Christian church coast colony common Constantinople contains death dialect district Dorian early edition emperor empire England English Eolic Euboea Europe feet fire force France French Ghibellin glumes gout grammar granite Greece Greek Greenland Gregory guaco guaiacum guano Guatemala Guelf Guizot gun-cotton gunpowder Hellenic Herodotus important Ionian island Italian Italy king known language later Latin literary literature London ment Messenia miles modern muzzle muzzle-loading nature obtained origin Paris passed Peloponnesus period Persian plants poems poet poetry political population possession principal projectile province published rifled Roman Rome saltpetre society Sparta species spikelet Surinam Thessaly tion town Turks various velocity whole writers