North-American Review and Miscellaneous JournalUniversity of Northern Iowa, 1832 |
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Page 56
... latter , if any there be , it is not so easy to observe , as there are no remains of the Punic language sufficient to assist us in the inquiry . We may , perhaps , discover hereafter , some traces of it , by comparing the Berber of what ...
... latter , if any there be , it is not so easy to observe , as there are no remains of the Punic language sufficient to assist us in the inquiry . We may , perhaps , discover hereafter , some traces of it , by comparing the Berber of what ...
Page 64
... latter . Of the two aboriginal races , into which the natives of Africa were anciently divided , and which were denominated by the Greeks the Ethi- opians and the Libyans , the latter , who called themselves Ber- ber , occupied the ...
... latter . Of the two aboriginal races , into which the natives of Africa were anciently divided , and which were denominated by the Greeks the Ethi- opians and the Libyans , the latter , who called themselves Ber- ber , occupied the ...
Page 144
... latter are to retain them in their new condition . There is some rea- son , why the former should and will object even more strongly than the latter to such a population , and the reasoning is becom- ing daily more cogent ; for as more ...
... latter are to retain them in their new condition . There is some rea- son , why the former should and will object even more strongly than the latter to such a population , and the reasoning is becom- ing daily more cogent ; for as more ...
Contents
COUSINS PHILOSOPHY | 19 |
LIFE AND TIMES OF RICHARD BAXTER | 36 |
HODGSONS MEMOIRS ON THE BERBER LANGUAGE | 54 |
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