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Alphabetical [« »] landowning 10 lands 49 landscape 2 language 75 languages 9 lannoy 1 laonikos 9 | Frequency [« »] 75 economic 75 few 75 images 75 language 75 palaeologi 75 phocas 75 rather | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances language |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,3 | the Bible into the Gothic language. The spread of Arian Christianity 2 2,3 | unacquainted with the Greek language, continued to speak their 3 2,3 | inside the province the Greek language was not the language of 4 2,3 | Greek language was not the language of the educated class, but 5 2,3 | educated class, but only the language of those who made a special 6 2,3 | fact that the native Syriac language was widely used in the East.[ 7 2,3 | native Egyptian (Coptic) language.~ The central government 8 2,3 | to Gregorovius, the old language, religion, customs, and 9 2,4 | still remained the official language of the Empire, the foundation 10 2,4 | undeniable rights as the language most spoken and understood 11 2,5 | native Egyptian (Coptic) language. The religious disturbances 12 2,5 | protection of the Latin language, somewhat detached from 13 2,5 | to “our favorite modern language of numbers,” and asserted 14 2,5 | substitution of the Coptic language in its stead. The Coptic 15 2,5 | still remained the official language of the Empire during the 16 2,5 | the most widely spoken language in the eastern part of the 17 3 | Romanized; their native language was Latin.~ The weak-minded 18 3,5 | decree not in the native language, but in the spoken Greek, 19 3,12| the rudiments of the Greek language.[124] But in spite of this 20 3,16| dependence upon the Old Greek language of the ancient historians, 21 3,16| written in the spoken Greek language, that vulgate Greek dialect, 22 4,1 | conception is Roman, whose language and culture are Greek, whose 23 4,1 | the Emperor, formed, by language and faith, a perfectly homogeneous 24 4,1 | fast and how deep the Arab language and culture spread over 25 4,1 | themselves properly in the Arab language more correctly and more 26 4,1 | young men know only the language and literature of the Arabs, 27 4,1 | have forgotten their own language, and there is hardly one 28 4,1 | and make poetry in this language with more beauty and more 29 4,1 | year 699, when the Arab language was rendered obligatory 30 4,4 | the population; hence his language reflects a strong influence 31 4,4 | influence of the popular spoken language.[99]~ In the field of church 32 5,3 | more and more “Greek” by language. For wide and general use 33 5,3 | evaluation of their contents and language, and comparison with other 34 5,6 | the same period were, in language, in ethnographical composition, 35 6,5 | proves convincingly that the language of the Cumans or the Polovtzi 36 6,7 | for Greek was to be the language of Basil’s legislative work. 37 6,8 | Byzantine titles. The Greek language was preserved in the church 38 6,8 | was used as the official language in the time of the Normans. 39 6,8 | merging, maintaining their own language, customs, and habits, The 40 7,3 | Slavonic, with barbarian language round about Athens, with 41 7,4 | all like speech nor one language, but their tongues were 42 7,4 | they belong neither to one language nor to one people; there 43 7,4 | particularly evident in the language, which, in its excessive 44 7,4 | neglect the popular spoken language of their time and left very 45 7,4 | entirely mummiform school language which is diametrically opposed 46 7,4 | opposed to the popular spoken language which was used in the literature 47 7,4 | inconceivable, in a foreign language, Persian or Scythian.” The 48 7,4 | corruption of the Greek language, which had become a sort 49 7,4 | corruption of the Greek language, one may see some traces 50 7,4 | up the artificial classic language and had recourse to the 51 7,4 | Latin classics, of the Latin language, of Latin prose and of Latin 52 8,16| broken away from the spoken language, which was not admitted 53 8,16| events of his epoch in clear language. Among the short writings 54 8,16| from the popular spoken language. But there are some examples 55 8,16| of the use of the spoken language and popular poetical meters 56 8,16| works written in the spoken language and presenting a sort of 57 9,4 | fixed.[97] The Albanian language is now full of Roman elements, 58 9,4 | beginning with the ancient Latin language and ending with the Venetian 59 9,5 | Greek nobility; the Greek language seems to have become officially 60 9,18| 1422. Cananus, who wrote in language very close to the spoken 61 9,18| could study the ancient language in the letter, without being 62 9,18| thoroughly acquainted with Latin language and literature. He lived 63 9,18| the “purity” of Hellenic language or sometimes in the style 64 9,18| his knowledge of the Latin language and literature. An assiduous 65 9,18| documents written m the spoken language of the Palaeologian epoch 66 9,18| specimen of the Greek spoken language of the time, which had already 67 9,18| problem of the original language of the Chronicle is still 68 9,19| imperfect teacher of the Greek language, who could impart the elements 69 9,19| the knowledge of the Greek language and some fragments of erudition; 70 9,19| the knowledge of the Greek language and literature in Italy 71 9,19| technical information on language and literature.~ Stress 72 9,19| southern Italy, where the Greek language and tradition continued 73 9,19| and society united by one language and religion and by a cultural 74 9,19| acquaintance with the Greek language and the beginnings of Greek 75 9,19| the knowledge of the Greek language and literature by lessons