| 1798 - 542 pages
...soon .have rendered necessary, being frequently expressive of the feelings of the mind, or denoting those ordinary modes of thought, which result from the social habits of mankind, or from the evila that tend to interrupt: them. It is not however to be understood, that the affinity... | |
| Asiatic Society of Bengal - 1807 - 504 pages
...soon have rendered necessary, being frequently expressive of the feelings of the mind, or denoting those ordinary modes of thought which result from the social habits of mankind', or from the evils that tend to interrupt them. It is not however to be understood, that the affinity... | |
| 1814 - 606 pages
...History and Languages of the Indian Islands. 167 mind, the most obvious moral ideas, the simplest ubjects of the understanding, and those ordinary modes of...presumed to be the case, that the affinity between tlie.se languages is radical, or that the latter is indebted to any Hindu dialect for its names for... | |
| Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles - 1830 - 600 pages
...involved, but also from the " nature of the terms borrowed, being such as the progress of " civilization must soon have rendered necessary, expressing " the...mankind ; whilst, at the same time, it is not to be under" stood, as some have presumed to be the case, that the " affinity between these languages is... | |
| 1901 - 842 pages
...soon have rendered necessary, being frequently expressive of the feelings of the mind, or denoting those ordinary modes of thought which result from the social habits of mankind, or from the wills that tend to interrupt them." Of a truth Malay abounds in Sanskrit words, the significance... | |
| William Edward Maxwell - 1914 - 200 pages
...soon have rendered necessary, being frequently expressive of the feelings of the mind, or denoting those ordinary modes of thought which result from the social habits of mankind, or from the evils that tend to interrupt them." This assertion might have been put in more forcible... | |
| Reinhold Rost - 2000 - 348 pages
...must soon have rendered necessary, being frequently expressive of the feelings of the mind or denoting those ordinary modes of thought which result from the social habits of mankind, or from the evils that tend to interrupt them. It is not, however, to be understood that the affinity... | |
| |