Cumberland & Westmorland, Ancient and Modern: The People, Dialect, Superstitions and CustomsWhittaker and Company, 1857 - 171 sider |
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Side 6
... perhaps a few of his immediate followers , left the country , but the people remained . And it is easy to see how out of an event of this kind a story of deportation may have arisen . No portion of language has been less investigated ...
... perhaps a few of his immediate followers , left the country , but the people remained . And it is easy to see how out of an event of this kind a story of deportation may have arisen . No portion of language has been less investigated ...
Side 8
... perhaps of no country have we any know- ledge of the aborigines . On the contrary , it is probable that even the rudest people has left enduring traces , wherever its occupation has been permanent ; though these are not always easily ...
... perhaps of no country have we any know- ledge of the aborigines . On the contrary , it is probable that even the rudest people has left enduring traces , wherever its occupation has been permanent ; though these are not always easily ...
Side 12
... perhaps mixed with some of the earliest of the Indo - European stock . The people of the Bronze age stood on the same grade of culture as the Celts ; yet Prof. Worsaae cannot bring himself to suppose that they were anything but the ...
... perhaps mixed with some of the earliest of the Indo - European stock . The people of the Bronze age stood on the same grade of culture as the Celts ; yet Prof. Worsaae cannot bring himself to suppose that they were anything but the ...
Side 18
... perhaps Quict ; but at least the word is not the Latin pictus , as the Romans invariably adopted the foreign name , and never gave one of their own . Celtic modes of burial are divided , by the author of the Archæo- logical Index , into ...
... perhaps Quict ; but at least the word is not the Latin pictus , as the Romans invariably adopted the foreign name , and never gave one of their own . Celtic modes of burial are divided , by the author of the Archæo- logical Index , into ...
Side 34
... perhaps a double object ; the rising ground was healthier than the valley , but it also afforded protection . The Sans . nagara , a city , is from naga , a hill . The Lat . pagus , a village , is the Gr . pagos , a hill . The Nor ...
... perhaps a double object ; the rising ground was healthier than the valley , but it also afforded protection . The Sans . nagara , a city , is from naga , a hill . The Lat . pagus , a village , is the Gr . pagos , a hill . The Nor ...
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Cumberland & Westmorland, Ancient & Modern: The People, Dialect ... Jeremiah Sullivan Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2020 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Ambleside amongst ancient Angles appears Baal belong Beltain Blencogo boggle bone-fires Britain Bronze age burial-place cairn called Cambro-Celts Castle Celtiberians Celtic Celts century CHAPTER Christian colonised connexion Cornwall Cultram Cumberland Cumberland and Westmorland Cumbrian dialect Cumrew Cumwhitton custom Danes Danish Denmark district doubt Eamont Edenhall England English euphonic Europe evidence existence fairies fell fire fireworship former German giants Gothic graves Hiberno-Celtic hill Iberian inhabitants Ireland Irish Irish language island Kendal kind Kirkby Kirkby Stephen Kirkby Thore Lancashire land language late latter Luck of Edenhall means mixed modern monument mountain names of places neighbourhood night Norse observed once origin orthography peculiar Penrith period person pond present probably pronunciation race remains remarkable river Roman Saxon says Scandinavian Silures Stone age story superstition supposed Tatár town traces tradition tribes Ullswater village vowel Wales Welsh Westmorland whilst witch words Worsaae