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        Displaying 1,850 digitized works or clusters of works
    
  1. 751

    Introduction [to The Poems of Geoffrey Chaucer Modernized]The poems of Geoffrey Chaucer, modernized ...

  2. 752

    An introduction literary and philosophical to languagesEspecially to the English, Latin, Greek and Hebrew; exhibiting at one view their grammar, rationale, analogy and idiom, in three parts. By Anselm Bayly, L.L.B. of His Majesty's chapel royal. Parts the first and second.

  3. 753

    An introduction to Aristotle's rhetoric,with analysis, notes and appendices,

  4. 754

    An introduction to English grammarto which is annexed a treatise on rhetorick. By Joshua Story.

  5. 755

    An introduction to English grammar, on universal principles ...

  6. 756

    Introduction to English, French and German phonetics,with reading lessons and exercises

  7. 757

    An introduction to Latin elegiac verse composition,

  8. 758

    An introduction to Latin lyric verse composition,

  9. 759

    An introduction to poetry :poetic expression, poetic truth, the progress of poetry.

  10. 760

    An introduction to the art of reading with energy and propriety.By John Rice.

  11. 761

    An introduction to the classicscontaining, a short discourse on their excellencies; and directions how to study them to advantage: with an essay, on the nature and use of those emphatical and beautiful figures which give strength and ornament to writing. By Anthony Blackwall, M.A.

  12. 762

    An introduction to the English language and learning.In three parts. ... By Benjamin Martin.

  13. 763

    An introduction to the history of the English language,

  14. 764

    Introduction to the literature of Europe in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

  15. 765

    Introduction to the literature of Europe in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

  16. 766

    Introduction to the literature of Europe in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

  17. 767

    Introduction to the literature of Europe, in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

  18. 768

    Introduction to the literature of Europe, in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

  19. 769

    Introduction to the literature of Europe, in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

  20. 770

    Introduction to the literature of Europe,in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

  21. 771

    Introduction to the literature of Europe,in the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

  22. 772

    Introduction to the literature of Europe, in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries

  23. 773

    An introduction to the principal Greek tragic and comic metres :in scansion, structure and ictus, with an appendix on syllabic quantity in Homer and Aristophanes

  24. 774

    An introduction to the principal Greek tragic and comic metres :with appendix on syllabic quantity in Homer and Aristophanes ; to which are now added treatises on the Sapphic stanza and the Elegiac distich

  25. 775

    Introduction to the science of language

  26. 776

    An introduction to the study of poetry

  27. 777

    An introduction, phonological, morphological, syntactic, to the Gothic of Ulfilas.

  28. 778

    THE INTRODUCTION.A General dictionary of the English language, compiled with the greatest care from the best authors and dictionaries now extant. By a society of gentlemen

  29. 779

    Introductions to the poets.

  30. 780

    Introductions to the twelve volumes of the Mermaid edition of Elizabethan playwrights.

  31. 781

    Introductory Essay on the Metre of Anglo-Saxon PoetryArchaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity

  32. 782

    'Inverted Feet' in VerseThe Academy.

  33. 783

    "Inverted Feet:" A Reply to Mr. OmondThe Academy.

  34. 784

    Is Rhyme Indispensable?The Westminster review.

  35. 785

    Is Verse a Trammel?The gentleman's magazine.

  36. 786

    Isaiah. A new translationwith a preliminary dissertation, and notes critical, philological, and explanatory. By Robert Lowth, D. D. F. R. SS. Lond. and Goetting, Lord Bishop of London.

  37. 787

    An Italian phonetic reader.

  38. 788

    The Jacobean poets.

  39. 789

    John Keats :his life and poetry, his friends, critics and afterfame

  40. 790

    Joshua Steele on Speech-Melody (1779)The Modern language review.

  41. 791

    The Journal of English studies.

  42. 792

    The Journal of English studies.

  43. 793

    Julian of Toledo 'De vitiis et figuris',

  44. 794

    Key to practical English prosody and versification.

  45. 795

    A key to the art of lettersor, English a Learned Language. Full of art, elegancy and variety. Being an essay to enable both foreigners, and the English youth of either sex, to speak and write the English tongue well and learnedly, according to the exactest Rules of Grammar. After which they may attain to Latin, French, or any other Foreign Language in a short time, with very little Trouble to themselves or their Teachers. With a preface shewing the Necessity of a Vernacular Grammar. Dedicated to his Highness the Duke of Gloucester. By A. Lane, late Master of the Free-School of Leominster in Herefordshire.

  46. 796

    A key to the classical pronunciation of Greek, Latin and Scripture proper names :in which the words are accented and divided into syllables ; to which are added terminational vocabularies of Hebrew, Greek and Latin proper names ; concluding with observations on the Greek and Latin accents and quantity

  47. 797

    A key to the classical pronunciation of Greek, Latin, and Scripture proper names ...critical notes ...

  48. 798

    Kinetic and Potential SpeechThe Oxford and Cambridge review

  49. 799

    King Horn, with fragments of Floriz and Blauncheflur, and of the Assumption of Our Lady :from a ms (GG.47.2) in the Cambridge University Library, also, from mss. in the British Museum, The Assumption of Our Lady (add. mss. 10036), and Fragments of the Floyres and Blancheflur (cotton vitellius D.III)

  50. 800

    King's College lectures on elocution;or, The physiology and culture of voice and speech, and the expression of the emotions by language, countenance, and gesture. To which is added a special lecture on the causes and cure of impediments of speech ...

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