Definitionadj. of or relating to or dealing with philology
Last update: September 7, 2015
2
Ramila talks about the philological work. [Please select]
0
Vossianus, c. 1300 (A); Laurentianus, end of 14th century (F); Ottoboniano-Vaticanus, 15th century (V); Daventriensis, 15th century (D), to which has to be added the Holkhamicus, 1421 (L), collated by Postgate, Cambridge Philological Transactions (1894) vol. [Please select]
0
Heinrich has his assured end, his philological professorship or thereabouts as a part of the Germanic machine. [Please select]
0
_Derbyshire_ (7) A list of the place-names of Derbyshire with philological notes is commenced by Mr. [Please select]
0
Sampson makes short work of Borrow's gypsy learning on its philological side. [Please select]
0
By the ninth and tenth centuries there are not only grammars, but great lexicons, and a mass of philological learning in Islam. [Please select]
0
Greppo has gone deeply into philological, historical, chronological, and geographical considerations. [Please select]
0
Karlgren from a philological point of view ("Legends and Cults in Ancient China", _The Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Bulletin_ No.) [Please select]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!