Archive
Displaying 4,891 digitized works
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3201
Phonics in reading ;a manual
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3202
A phonographic dictionary of the English language,containing the most usual words, to the number of twelve thousand. August, 1845-December, 1846, forming a supplement of the Ipswich fono-press.
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3203
The phonological investigation of Old English;illustrated in a series of fifty problems.
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3204
Phonology & grammer of modern West Frisian;with phonetic texts and glossary,
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3205
Phonology and orthoëpy:an elementary treatise on pronunciation for the use of teachers and schools.
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3206
Phonology and phonotype;a text book ...
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3207
The phonology of Gallic clerical Latin after the sixth century :an introductory historical study based chiefly on Merovingian and Carolingian spelling and on the forms of old French loan-words
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3208
The phonology of Gallie clerical Latin after the 6th century...
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3209
The phonology of the Bakhtiari, Badakhshami, and Madaglashti dialects of modern Persian,
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3210
The phonology of the Elis saga ...
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3211
The phonology of the London ms. of the earliest complete English prose Psalter ...
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3212
The phonology of the Pistojese dialect ...
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3213
The phonology of the Pistojese dialect ...
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3214
The phonology of the Spanish dialect of Mexico City ...
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3215
The Phonotypic journal.
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3216
Phrasal ProsodyEnglish journal.
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3217
Phreno-mnemotechny;or, The art of memory: the series of lectures, explanatory of the principles of the system, delivered in New York and Philadelphia, in the beginning of 1844,
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3218
Physical culture and development of the voice.
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3219
Physical culture and voice work for use in public schools,
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3220
The Physiology of VersificationPages from an old volume of life ; a collection of essays, 1857-1881
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3221
The Physiology of VersificationPages from an old volume of life: a collection of essays, 1857-1881
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3222
The Physiology of VersificationPages from an old volume of life ; a collection of essays, 1857-1881
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3223
Picaresque dramas of the 17th and 18th centuries ...
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3224
The pictorial grammar
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3225
Pictures in language work,
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3226
Pictures of poetryhistorical, biographical, and critical. By Alex. Thomson, Esq. author of whist, and the paradise of taste.
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3227
Piety, and poesy. Contracted. By T. J.
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3228
Pilot book for Sentence and theme.
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3229
Pinneo's exercises in false syntax :for the correction of errors in the grammatical construction of sentences : designed to aid in the study of the author's grammars of the English language
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3230
Pinneo's guide to composition :a series of practical lessons : designed to simplify the art of writing composition : for beginners
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3231
Pinneo's primary grammar of the English language :for beginners
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3232
Pitch Patterns in EnglishStudies in philology.
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3233
The Place of an Adverb: A Study of RhythmNeophilologus.
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3234
A plain and complete grammar of the English languageto which is prefixed the English accedence: with remarks and observations on A short introduction to English grammar. By Anselm Bayly, L. L. D. Sub-Dean of His Majesty's Chapel-Royal.
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3235
A plain system of elocution :or, Logical and musical reading and declamation, with exercises in prose and verse
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3236
A plain, rational essay on English grammar :the main object of which is to point out a plain, rational and permanent standard of pronunciation : to which is given a gamut or key
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3237
A plan for instructing pupils in the art of elocution. By J. Rice
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3238
THE PLAN OF A DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE.Miscellaneous and fugitive pieces. ...
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3239
Platonism in English poetry of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries,
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3240
A Plea for Certain Exotic Forms of VerseThe Cornhill magazine.
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3241
A plea for spoken language.An essay upon comparative elocution, condensed from lectures delivered throughout the United States.
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3242
A plea for the study of historical English,
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3243
The Plowshaer;an exemplication of alphabetic reform.
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3244
The Plowshaer;an exemplication of alphabetic reform.
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3245
A pocket dictionary or complete English expositorshewing readily The Part of Speech to which each Word belongs; its true Meaning, when not self-evident; its various Senses, if more than one, placed in proper Order; and the Language, from whence it is deriv'd, pointed out immediately after the Explication. Also The Technical Terms are clearly explain'd; every Word is so accented, that there can be no Uncertainty as to the Pronunciation; and the Names of the Cities and principal Towns, their Distance from London, their Market Days, and Fairs, according to the New Style, are alphabetically interspers'd; with other useful Articles. To render this Book complete, many modern Words are introduc'd, which are not to be found in other Dictionaries; and to make it more concise and portable, such Words are omitted, as being neither properly English, nor ever used by good Authors, would only serve to mislead and embarrass the Learner. A Work entirely new, and design'd for the Youth of both Sexes, the Ladies and Persons in Business. To which is prefix'd An introduction, Containing an History of the English Language, with a compendious Grammar: And a recommendation of the manuscript copy, in a letter from Dr. Bevis to the publisher.
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3246
Pocket library of English literature.
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3247
Poe and Amy LowellModern language notes.
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3248
Poems
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3249
Poems :third series
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3250
The poems and fragments of Catullus