| Robert Caldwell - 1875 - 820 lehte
...beyond the Indus to the southern confines of Central Asia. The Brahui language, considered as a whole, seems to be derived from the same source as the Panjabi and Sindhi, but it evidently contains a Dravidian element ; and the discovery of this Dravidian element in a language... | |
| Robert Caldwell - 1875 - 816 lehte
...beyond the Indus to the southern confines of Central Asia. The Brahui language, considered as a whole, seems to be derived from the same source as the Panjabi and Sindht, but it evidently contains a Dravidian element ; and the discovery of this Dravidian element... | |
| Stephen Denison Peet, J. O. Kinnaman - 1887 - 428 lehte
...competent a scholar as Dr. Caldwell refuses the Brahui a place in his list of Dravidian tongues; and says, "it seems to be derived from the same source as the PanjabI and Sindhl," but contains a Dravidiau element, "which was probably derived from the remnant of some ancient... | |
| Denys Bray - 1986 - 256 lehte
...aid well, who summed up his final position in the words " The Brahui language, considered as a whole, seems to be derived from the same source as the Panjabi a.nd Sindhi. but it evidently contains a Dravidian element,'' but the converse, first suggested by Lassen in the early... | |
| Robert Needham Cust - 2000 - 216 lehte
...Baluchi. The Khan of Kelat is himself a Brahu, but Baluchi is the State-Language, and he and his nohles speak both Languages. The two races intermarry, and...for future Philologists, and it is to be hoped, that the Government of India will take steps to have a proper Grammar prepared, as the materials and access... | |
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