The Anthropological Review, Volume 8Trübner and Company, 1870 |
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Page 29
... animals , especially the larger ones , as well as of man . Probably the difference would be found pretty nearly analogous to the difference in the respect alluded to of the general natural frame . But this is matter of conjecture only ...
... animals , especially the larger ones , as well as of man . Probably the difference would be found pretty nearly analogous to the difference in the respect alluded to of the general natural frame . But this is matter of conjecture only ...
Page 30
... animals have voice , man only speech . ' This truth , proclaimed by Aristotle , is universally accepted in our day . All the world acknowledges that language is one of the highest attributes of the human species . The languages , that ...
... animals have voice , man only speech . ' This truth , proclaimed by Aristotle , is universally accepted in our day . All the world acknowledges that language is one of the highest attributes of the human species . The languages , that ...
Page 31
... animals . ( P. 366. ) The process of language is next traced from the vocabulary to the grammar , and thence to the lan- guage complete . ( P. 368. ) In regard to the common origin of differ- ent languages we are told that " The ...
... animals . ( P. 366. ) The process of language is next traced from the vocabulary to the grammar , and thence to the lan- guage complete . ( P. 368. ) In regard to the common origin of differ- ent languages we are told that " The ...
Page 32
... animals the functions of an animal , because they are more simple and more ob- scure . " ( P. 424. ) He maintains that any people is entitled to be termed " religious " if they believe in a supreme being , and a future state . ( P. 425 ...
... animals the functions of an animal , because they are more simple and more ob- scure . " ( P. 424. ) He maintains that any people is entitled to be termed " religious " if they believe in a supreme being , and a future state . ( P. 425 ...
Page 33
... animals or vegetables cross themselves , that is to say , when the parents possess different characteristics , there is necessarily a contest ; and that con- test is so much the more lively as the races are more distinct one from the ...
... animals or vegetables cross themselves , that is to say , when the parents possess different characteristics , there is necessarily a contest ; and that con- test is so much the more lively as the races are more distinct one from the ...
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Common terms and phrases
American Anglo-Saxon animals Anthropological Anthropological Review appears bilious blood bones brain Britain British Britons Cæsar called Carlier cause cell Celtic Celts cent character characteristics civilisation climate colour common sources Cornish language Cornwall cranial deaths defendant Devon Devonshire doubt Dutch England English especially Europe European exist fact favour Freeman Gauls German Gildas hair head Henry of Huntingdon human immigrants Indian inhabitants intussusception Ireland Irish islands Isle of Axholme language less living look Malay matter microcephali mind moral nation native nature negro Nennius nervous Norman Conquest observations opinion organism original painting Palembang Papuans passage peculiar period persons physical physiology plaintiff plaintiff's book Polynesian population present Prichard primitive produced Professor Huxley question races reference regard remarks Retzius Roman Saxon says settlers side skin skulls Sumatra temperament Teutonic tion Virchow Welsh West Midland counties whole word