The Origin and Progress of the Art of Writing: A Connected Narrative of the Development of the Art in Its Primeval Phases in Egypt, China, and Mexico ... and Its Subsequent Progress to the Present DayDay and Son, 1855 - 178 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 35
Seite 4
... objects , were also expressed ; and thirdly , by the representation of a sound , instead of an object , and the means by which it was first accomplished . Finally , we may witness the gradual creation of a complete set of signs ...
... objects , were also expressed ; and thirdly , by the representation of a sound , instead of an object , and the means by which it was first accomplished . Finally , we may witness the gradual creation of a complete set of signs ...
Seite 5
... object or idea - expressing characters , as to make use of these signs occasionally to express the spoken sound of the object depicted ; and by combining one or two such objects , to express successfully the sound of some foreign name ...
... object or idea - expressing characters , as to make use of these signs occasionally to express the spoken sound of the object depicted ; and by combining one or two such objects , to express successfully the sound of some foreign name ...
Seite 6
... objects they once portrayed , form not only a sufficient general proof of their own pictorial source , but also of that of the Phoenician alphabet . The names of the Phoenician letters , which have unfortunately been lost , were ...
... objects they once portrayed , form not only a sufficient general proof of their own pictorial source , but also of that of the Phoenician alphabet . The names of the Phoenician letters , which have unfortunately been lost , were ...
Seite 12
... objects which previously had no fixed appellation , and who discovered the art of tracing letters . " One of the first notices of the origin of writing which occurs in Roman literature is the often - quoted passage of Lucan : " Phonices ...
... objects which previously had no fixed appellation , and who discovered the art of tracing letters . " One of the first notices of the origin of writing which occurs in Roman literature is the often - quoted passage of Lucan : " Phonices ...
Seite 14
... objects and events , as expressed by signs and not by sounds , would probably appear the same to both . It appears evident that the art of painting , that is , the idea of imitating the forms of plants , animals , or other objects , was ...
... objects and events , as expressed by signs and not by sounds , would probably appear the same to both . It appears evident that the art of painting , that is , the idea of imitating the forms of plants , animals , or other objects , was ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The Origin and Progress of the Art of Writing: A Connected Narrative of the ... Henry Noel 1810-1879 Humphreys Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2021 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abbreviation adopted alluded ancient Anglo-Saxon appears art of writing Assyrian became British Museum calligraphers capitals Champollion Charlemagne charter Chinese Christian civilisation coins copy cuneatic cuneiform cursive hand decorative deed demotic described distinct earliest early Egypt Egyptian hieroglyphics Egyptian system Emperor engraved epoch Europe evidently example executed exhibit existing expressed fifteenth century fifth century French Gospels Gothic Greece Greek alphabet Greek writing handwriting Hebrew alphabet hieroglyphic iconographic illuminated inscriptions invention Italy kaph kind king known language later period Latin Library Lombardic manner Merovingian mode of writing modern monuments original ornamental Oscan papyrus passage Pelasgian penmanship Phoenician phonetic pictorial Plate VIII Plate XIV portion practised preserved probably progress reads records reign represented resembling Roman alphabet Roman cursive Samaritan Samaritan alphabet Saxon scribes shew shewn signs similar sound specimen Plate square Hebrew system of writing tablets tenth century termed traces uncial vellum vowels word
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 81 - And the stones shall be with the names of the children of Israel, twelve, according to their names, like the engravings of a signet; every one with his name shall they be according to the twelve tribes.
Seite 81 - And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him upon mount Sinai, two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God.
Seite 70 - In the fourteenth year, I raised the country, and assembled a great army ; with 120,000 warriors I crossed the Euphrates. Then it came to pass that Hem-ithra, king of Atesh, and Arhulena, king of Hamath, and the twelve kings of the tribes of the upper and lower country, collected their forces together, and came before me offering battle. I engaged with them, and defeated them ; their leaders, and captains, and men of war I cast into chains.
Seite 81 - And the Lord said unto Moses, Write this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua : for I will utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.
Seite 39 - ... expressed, partly by figures of animals, and partly by certain marks or notes intricately knotted, revolving in the manner of a wheel, and crowded together, and curled inward like the tendrils of a vine, so as to hide the meaning from the curiosity of the profane.
Seite 13 - ... all agitated. The inhabitants of hades wept at night; and the heavens, as an expression of joy, rained down ripe grain. From the invention of writing, the machinations of the human heart began to operate; stories false and erroneous daily increased ; litigations and imprisonments sprung up ; hence, also, specious and artful language, which causes so much confusion in the world. It was for these reasons that the shades of the departed wept at night.
Seite 13 - The heavens, the earth, and the gods were all agitated. The inhabitants of hades wept at night ; and the heavens, as an expression of joy, rained down ripe grain.
Seite 139 - Bernaldez, who flourished towards the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and who wrote a chronicle of Ferdinand and Isabella, long inedited (MS.
Seite 62 - Professor Grotefend has certainly the credit of being the first who opened a gallery into this rich treasure-house of antiquity. In deciphering the names of Cyrus, Darius, Xerxes, and Hystaspes, he obtained the true determination of nearly a third of the entire alphabet, and thus at once supplied a sure and ample basis for further research.
Seite 156 - It is not earlier than the fourteenth century that we find examples of private holograph letters, — that is, letters entirely written by the hand of the person whose signature they bear ; for most, indeed nearly all of the letters of eminent persons of...