906 resultados para anglo-centrism
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Published also in part (2 p. l., 32 p.) as the author's inaugural dissertation, Jena, 1899.
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Founded by W. Hadfield and C. Dunlop and for many years edited by the latter.
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In 3 parts: the 1st an abridgment of Geoffrey of Monmouth's "Historia Britonum": the 2d, a history of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman kings to the death of Henry III; the 3d, a history of the reign of Edward I. The language is a specimen of the French of Yorkshire. cf. Introd.
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"Glossary of Anglo-Norman and Gascon words": p. [145]-197; "Glossary of Catalan words": p. [199]-238; "Glossary of Low-German words": p. [239]-262.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Among friends.--The Anglo-American school of polite unlearning.--The hundred worst books.--The convention of books.--In praise of politicians.--My missionary life in Persia.--The colonel in the theological seminary.--The romance of ethics.--The merry devil of education.
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The road.--The sacred work.--Balance sheet of the soldier workman.--The children's jewel fund.--France, 1916-1917--an impression.--Englishman and Russian.--American and Briton.--Anglo-American drama and its future.--Speculations.--The land, 1917.--The land, 1918.--Grotesques.
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Title vignette.
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Includes section "Book reviews".
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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"It is proposed by the Society, in continuing the work, to trace down the stream of British literature, in successive periods of time, to the close of the seventeenth century." Only these two volumes appeared, however.
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"The first, third, tenth and fifteenth chapters in the present volume have seen the light already in ʻthe Nineteenth century'; the ninth is re-arranged from ʻthe Anglo-Saxon review'; and the sixteenth reprinted from ʻthe Magazine of fine arts' ... Certain of the remarks in other portions of this book were first made in the ʻStandard'."--Note.
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The author died while several chapters of v. 6 were obviously unfinished, but no attempt was made to complete the subject-matter. The work was to have been concluded with a 7th volume discussing the illuminated manuscripts of the period.
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"The first, third, tenth and fifteenth chapters in the present volume have seen the light already in 'the Nineteenth century'; the ninth is re-arranged from 'the Anglo-Saxon review'; and the sixteenth reprinted from 'the Magazine of fine arts' ... Certain of the remarks in other portions of this book were first made in the 'Standard.'"--Note.