Archive

        Displaying 2,167 digitized works or clusters of works
    
  1. 1301

    Notes for teachers of English composition(to be used in connection with "Elements of rhetoric and English composition," first high school course) ...

  2. 1302

    Notes on English EtymologyTransactions of the Philological Society

  3. 1303

    Notes on English,

  4. 1304

    Notes on public speaking, for the classes in public speaking, Cornell university.

  5. 1305

    Nova grammatices experimenta: or, some new essays of a natural and artificial grammar. Which first demonstrates the natural rudiments of al [sic] languages; ...

  6. 1306

    Object lessons.Things taught: systematic instruction in composition and object lessons.

  7. 1307

    Observations introductory to a work on English etymology

  8. 1308

    Observations on Rhythmic ActionStudies from the Yale psychological laboratory

  9. 1309

    Of Accent. Its Nature and Use. - Standard of Pronunciation. From the Theory of Language, in the same Work.The annual register, or a view of the history, politics, and literature, for the year 1783.

  10. 1310

    Of GRAMMAR and LANGUAGES. The universal library: or, compleat summary of science. Containing above sixty select treatises. In two volumes. ...

  11. 1311

    Of LANGUAGE in general ; of GRAMMAR in general ; and particularly that of the ENGLISH TONGUE.Bibliotheca technologica: or, a philological library of literary arts and sciences. viz. I. Theology; ... XXV. Miscellanies: ... By Benjamin Martin, ...

  12. 1312

    Of Prosody, or the Musical Element in SpeechThe philology of the English tongue,

  13. 1313

    Of RHETORIC and ORATORY ; or the Art of SPEAKING with ELOQUENCE and PERSUASION.Bibliotheca technologica: or, a philological library of literary arts and sciences. viz. I. Theology; ... XXV. Miscellanies: ... By Benjamin Martin, ...

  14. 1314

    Of RhetorickThe universal library: or, compleat summary of science. Containing above sixty select treatises. In two volumes. ...

  15. 1315

    Of the origin and progress of language. |...

  16. 1316

    Of the origin and progress of language. |...

  17. 1317

    Of the origin and progress of language. |...

  18. 1318

    Of the origin and progress of language. |...

  19. 1319

    Of VersificationA guide to the Anglo-Saxon tongue: a grammar after Erasmus Rask, extracts in prose and verse, with notes, etc., for the use of learners, and an appendix,

  20. 1320

    Off and on.

  21. 1321

    The Old and Middle English,

  22. 1322

    An Old English grammar,

  23. 1323

    An Old English grammar.

  24. 1324

    Old-English phonology,

  25. 1325

    The old-Latin and old-Irish monuments of verse,

  26. 1326

    Omission as a Means of Phonetic RepresentationTransactions and proceedings of the American Philological Association

  27. 1327

    On an English Vowel-Mutation, present in Cag, KegTransactions and proceedings of the American Philological Association

  28. 1328

    On Constructions of Indirect Discourse in Early Germanic DialectsThe Journal of English and Germanic philology.

  29. 1329

    On early English pronunciation :with special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds by means of the ordinary printing types. Including a rearrangement of Prof. F.J. Child's memoirs on the language of Chaucer and Gower, and reprints of the rare tracts by Salesburv on English, 1547, and Welch, 1567, and by Barclay on French, 1521.

  30. 1330

    On early English pronunciation :with special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds by means of the ordinary printing types. Including a rearrangement of Prof. F.J. Child's memoirs on the language of Chaucer and Gower, and reprints of the rare tracts by Salesburv on English, 1547, and Welch, 1567, and by Barclay on French, 1521.

  31. 1331

    On early English pronunciation :with special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds by means of the ordinary printing types. Including a rearrangement of Prof. F.J. Child's memoirs on the language of Chaucer and Gower, and reprints of the rare tracts by Salesburv on English, 1547, and Welch, 1567, and by Barclay on French, 1521.

  32. 1332

    On early English pronunciation :with special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds by means of the ordinary printing types. Including a rearrangement of Prof. F.J. Child's memoirs on the language of Chaucer and Gower, and reprints of the rare tracts by Salesburv on English, 1547, and Welch, 1567, and by Barclay on French, 1521.

  33. 1333

    On early English pronunciation :with special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day, preceded by a systematic notation of all spoken sounds by means of the ordinary printing types. Including a rearrangement of Prof. F.J. Child's memoirs on the language of Chaucer and Gower, and reprints of the rare tracts by Salesburv on English, 1547, and Welch, 1567, and by Barclay on French, 1521.

  34. 1334

    On early English pronunciation,with especial reference to Chaucer, in opposition to the views maintained by Mr. A. J. Ellis in his work "On early English pronunciation, with especial reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer."

  35. 1335

    On speech formation as the basis for true spelling.

  36. 1336

    On teaching English,with detailed examples, and an enquiry into the definition of poetry.

  37. 1337

    ON THE ANALOGY BETWEEN PAINTING, POETRY, AND MUSIC.A collection of original poems, essays and epistles. By John Werge, A.B.

  38. 1338

    On the English language, past and present

  39. 1339

    On the history and use of the suffixes -ery (-ry), -age, and -ment in English.

  40. 1340

    On the origin and ramifications of the English language.Preceded by an inquiry into the primitive seats, early migrations, and final settlements of the principal European nations.

  41. 1341

    On the origin, development, peculiarities and destiny of the English language ...

  42. 1342

    On the Pronunciation of GreekThe Classical museum.

  43. 1343

    On the Pronunciation of Old Spanish ç and Final zRomanic review.

  44. 1344

    On the Pronunciation of the LATIN TONGUE. To Mrs. ROXANA TERMAGANT.Have at you all: or, the Drury-Lane journal. By Madam Roxana Termagant.

  45. 1345

    On the Pronunciation of the Word AchesThe European magazine, and London review; containing the literature, history, politics, arts, manners and amusements of the age. By the Philological Society of London.

  46. 1346

    On the relations between spoken and written language with special reference to English,

  47. 1347

    On the Sound and Pronunciation of some British and German Words in the Time of the RomansTransactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom.

  48. 1348

    On the study of words

  49. 1349

    On the Vowel Point of the Hebrew LanguageThe Classical journal.

  50. 1350

    On transferred appellations of human beings

50