| George Perkins Marsh - 1860 - 716 páginas
...a man speaks, so he thinks, and as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. It is evident, therefore, that unity of speech is essential to the unity of...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or of government, and contemporaneous nations of one speech, however formally separated by differences... | |
| George Perkins Marsh - 1863 - 740 páginas
...a man speaks, so he thinks, and as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. It is evident, therefore, that unity of speech is essential to the unity of...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or of government, and contemporaneous nations of one speech, however formally separated by differences... | |
| George Perkins Marsh - 1867 - 766 páginas
...a man speaks, so he thinks, and as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. It is evident, therefore, that unity of speech is essential to the unity of...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or of government, and contemporaneous nations of one speech, however formally separated by differences... | |
| Francis Fisher Broune - 1870 - 524 páginas
...the catchwords by which to win their patronage. The significance of words is illustrated by nothing more strikingly than by the fact that unity of speech...widely divorced, are one in culture, one in feeling. The settlement of townships and counties in our country, by distinct bodies of foreigners, is therefore... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - 1870 - 536 páginas
...the catchwords by which to win their patronage. The significance of words is illustrated by nothing more strikingly than by the fact that unity of speech...widely divorced, are one in culture, one in feeling. The settlement of townships and counties in our country, by distinct bodies of foreigners, is therefore... | |
| William Mathews - 1876 - 474 páginas
...rivulet, which has been aware of the horrible secret all along, in spite of its smiling surface." The significance of words is illustrated by nothing, perhaps,...that the fine patriotic effusion of Arndt, " Was ist des Deutschen Vaterland," was founded upon the idea that the oneness of the Deutsche Zunge, the German... | |
| George Perkins Marsh - 1885 - 612 páginas
...a man speaks, so he thinks, and as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. It is evident, therefore, that unity of speech is essential to the unity of...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or of government, and contemporaneous nations of one speech, however formally separated by differences... | |
| Tony Crowley - 1996 - 228 páginas
...interests (class for example) the language offered national unity and coherence: It is evident therefore that unity of speech is essential to the unity of...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or government, and contemporaneous nations of one speech, however formally separated by differences... | |
| Richard Hoggart - 380 páginas
...thing a political party gives up is its vocabulary. Alexis Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 1835-40 Unity of speech is essential to the unity of a people....language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or government. GP Marsh, cit. Rod Mengham, The Descent of Language, 1993 My language is the universal... | |
| Lucy Burke, Tony Crowley, Alan Girvin - 2000 - 532 páginas
..."differing" and "deferring" in both their active and passive senses. It is evident therefore that onity of speech is essential to the unity of a people. Community...language is a stronger bond than identity of religion or government. (GP Marsh, The Origin and History of the English Language and the Literature it Embodies,... | |
| |