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- ¬С¬С posted on 09/09/2004
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- ĬĬ posted on 09/10/2004|T9 THT 0009 |B9a {Toch B 9\T III So 92.49} |l1 m eṅkl akntsaññe tu ṢP\ - kare : bhav //// m `e-ṅkl^a-kn-tsa-ññe tu-ṢP\ (*) ka-re : bha-v //// |l2 me MAkte camceR\ eṅkalntse warKṢAL\ taṅtsi : śtw //// me MA-kte ca-mce-R\ `e-ṅka-lntse wa-rKṢA-L\ ta-ṅtsi : śtw //// |l3 ktseñe {kektseñe} ykṃṣe lkṣlya aśubh\ ṣeK\ waRAṢ
- bbbb posted on 09/11/2004
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- xw posted on 09/07/2004Tyrian purple The chemist Sir Humphry Davy had, however, earlier concluded tat the Greek and Roman painters had almost the same colours as those employed by the great Italian masters at the period of the revival of the arts in italy. They had indeed the advantage over them in two colours, the Vestorian or Egyptian azure and the Tyrian or marine purple. The despised dyers, clothiers, artists, decorators and cavalry-men of antiquity, indeed all sho in their callings then used colour terms with precisio
- С posted on 08/14/2004
- xw posted on 09/07/2004In 1690 John Locke (1632-1704) published his Essay concerning Human Understanding, the greater part of which he wrote while living in Holland. Locke dealt with ideas and words as the great instruments of knowledge and stated: the ends of language in our discourse with others being chiefly these three: first, to make known one mans thoughts or ideas to another. Secondly, to do it with as much ease and quickness as is possible; and thirdly, thereby to convey the knowledge of things. Language is eith
- xw posted on 09/07/2004ORINGIN OF THE LATIN ALPHABET The Latin alphabet by the time of Cicero(106-43BC) consisted of 21 letters derived and modified from the Greek alphabet, possibly through direct contact with the Greek colonists at cumae in the Bay of Naples, more probably through the intermediary of the widely trading piratical Etruscans of northern Italy, who had contended with the Greks for maritime supremacy while the Romans were but land-bound farmers in Latium and who had already adopted an alphabet of Greet origin i
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