Archive
Displaying 4,891 digitized works
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401
The Chaucer tradition,
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402
Chaucer's dremes-lemesModern language notes.
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403
Chaucer's Identical RimesModern language notes.
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404
Chaucer's Language and VersificationA Chaucer Handbook,
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405
Chaucer's pronunciation and the spelling of the Ellesmere ms.
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406
Chaucer's Use of the Octosyllabic Verse in The Book of the Duchess and The House of FameThe Journal of English and Germanic philology.
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407
Chaucer's VirelaysThe Athenµum.
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408
Chiasmus in Sallust, Caesar, Tacitus and Justinus.
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409
The child and his spelling;an investigation of the psychology of spelling, individual and sex differences in spelling abilities and needs, the character and range of the spelling vocabulary, and the practical problems of teaching spelling,
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410
The child life fifth reader
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411
The child vision :being a study in mental development & expression
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412
The child's friend :being an entirely new, and systematic arrangement of all the sounds, combinations of characters, and exceptions in the English language ...
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413
A child's garden of verses,
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414
The child's grammar :corresponding with parsing lessons and forming part of a series for teaching
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415
The child-voice in singing,treated from a physiological and a practical standpoint, and especially adapted to schools and boy choirs,
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416
Chinese phonology :an attempt to discover the sounds of the ancient language and to recover the lost rhymes of China
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417
Chirologia, or, The naturall language of the handcomposed of the speaking motions, and discoursing gestures thereof : whereunto is added Chironomia, or, The art of manuall rhetoricke, consisting of the naturall expressions, digested by art in the hand, as the chiefest instrument of eloquence, by historicall manifesto's exemplified out of the authentique registers of common life and civill conversation : with types, or chyrograms, a long-wish'd for illustration of this argument
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418
Choice readings for public and private entertainments, and for the use of schools, colleges and public readers, with elocutionary advice
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419
Choir training based on voice production,
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420
Choriambic Dimeter and the Rehabilitation of the AntispastTransactions and proceedings of the American Philological Association
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421
ChoriambicsPoems and ballads.
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422
The chorus of Euripides,
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423
Chrestomathia;
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424
Chronicle of Scottish poetry ;from the thirteenth century, to the union of the crowns :
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425
Chronicle of Scottish poetry ;from the thirteenth century, to the union of the crowns :
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426
Chronicle of Scottish poetry ;from the thirteenth century, to the union of the crowns :
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427
Chronicle of Scottish poetry ;from the thirteenth century, to the union of the crowns :
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428
Chronicles of England;a metrical history.
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429
Chronology and Metrical TestsPublications of the Modern Language Association of America
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430
Cicero on the complete orator,in three books or dialogues, inscribed to his brother Quintus, translated into English, with notes and illustrations, by George Barnes Barrister of the Inner Temple.
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431
Cicero's Brutus, or history of famous orators: also, his Orator, or accomplished speaker. Now first translated into English, by E. Jones
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432
Cicero's HexametersTransactions and proceedings of the American Philological Association
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433
Cider, a poem in two books,by John Philips. With notes provincial, historical, and classical, by Charles Dunster.
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434
The circles of Gomer or, an essay towards an investigation and introduction of the English, as an universal language, upon the first principles of speech, according to its hieroglyfic signs, argrafic, archetypes, and superior pretensions to originality; a retrieval of original knowledge; and a re-union of nations and opinions on the like principles, as well as the e[vi]dence of ancient writersWith an English grammar, some illustrations of the subjects of the author's late essays, and other interesting discoveries. By Row. Jones, Esq.
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435
The claims of Ossian examined and appreciated: an essay on the Scottish and Irish poems published under that name;in which the question of their genuineness and historical credit is freely discussed: together with some curious particulars relative to the structure and state of poetry in the Celtic dialects of Scotland and Ireland.
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436
The claims of the English language.An address delivered before the Phi-Delta and Thalian Societies of Oglethorpe University, Georgia, on Commencement day, November 10, 1852.
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437
A class book in English grammar and analysis
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438
Class-book in oratory :a complete drill book for practice of the principles of vocal physiology, and for acquiring the art of elocution and oratory comprising all the essential elements of vocal delivery and gesture, with all the later selections for public recitals
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439
The class-book of etymology :designed to promote precision in the use, and facilitate the acquisition of a knowledge of the English language
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440
A class-room conversation book.
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441
Classic myth in the poetic drama of the age of Elizabeth,
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442
A classical arrangement of fugitive poetry.Vol. V.
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443
A classical arrangement of fugitive poetry.Vol. XVIII.
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444
Classical Metres in English Poetry. Essays by Divers HandsEssays by divers hands,
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445
Classical metres in English verseMilton's prosody
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446
A classified catalogue of educational works in use in the United Kingdom and its dependencies in 1887 ...
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447
Clause-Length in English ProseThe Dublin review.
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448
Clear speaking and good reading
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449
Cobb's abridgment of J. Walker's critical pronouncing dictionary, and expositor of the English language, carefully compiled from the London quarto editions, published under the inspection of the author; in which Mr. Walker's principles of orthography and pronunciation are strictly followed ... to which are prefixed concise principles of pronunciation, and rules for accentuation and the division of words: with an appendix, containing a class of words which are in common use in this country, and not found in Walker's dictionary.Particularly designed for the use of schools.
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450
Cobb's new spelling book :in six parts ...