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Alphabetical [« »] et 1 ethnol 1 europe 25 european 41 europeans 2 even 29 evening 19 | Frequency [« »] 42 death 42 too 41 city 41 european 41 lived 41 seven 40 child | Joseph Jacobs Indian Fairy Tales IntraText - Concordances european |
Tale
1 Pre | Fairy Tale, and that all European fairy tales have been brought 2 Pre | of the main incidents of European folk-tales can be traced 3 Pre | the commonest incidents in European folk-tales have been found 4 GeNote| Avian, and so came into the European Aesop. I have discussed 5 GeNote| alone. Their influence on European folk-tales has been very 6 GeNote| the relations between the European and the Indian collections.~ 7 GeNote| work he has done for the European folk-tale is even more valuable 8 GeNote| striking incidents common to European folk-tales are also to be 9 GeNote| process, and when Indian meets European, European meets Indian; 10 GeNote| when Indian meets European, European meets Indian; which borrowed 11 GeNote| parallels between Indian and European folk-tale incidents in his 12 GeNote| good case for tracing all European drolls, or comic folk-tales, 13 GeNote| number of Indian variants of European "formulae" beyond those 14 GeNote| incidents found in common among European folk-tales (including drolls). 15 GeNote| that are held in common by European children? I think we may 16 GeNote| the curious result that European children owe their earliest 17 GeNote| outside his body from some European sailor touching at Goa? 18 GeNote| plants and animals. The European may once have had these 19 GeNote| tales that are common to all European children, and increasing 20 GeNote| tales have ousted the native European, which undoubtedly existed 21 GeNote| hold with Benfey that all European folk-tales are derived from 22 GeNote| nucleus of stories in every European land which is common to 23 GeNote| Stories (pp. 386 - 436), for European ones to my alphabetical 24 GeNote| between the Indian and the European tales, with the object of 25 StNote| whence all the modern European Aesops are derived.~Remarks. - 26 StNote| Indian stories as well as in European folk-tales (see notes on 27 StNote| however, equally frequent in European folk-tales: see my List 28 StNote| large number of Indian and European folk-tales (Temple, Analysis, 29 StNote| the relation of Indian and European fairy-tales. The human mind 30 StNote| thousand years, when even European peasants are not likely 31 StNote| remarkable collection of European variants in the Bulletin 32 StNote| theme of the common store of European folk-tales found in India. 33 StNote| and he allows that the European forms have been influenced 34 StNote| Djinn and the bottle) and European tales is also a secondary 35 StNote| substituted" are frequent in both European (see my List, s. v.) and 36 StNote| to heroes and heroines in European fairy tales, with stars 37 StNote| common property of Indian and European fairy tales: see Stokes, 38 StNote| incidents, common to most European collections, found in India, 39 StNote| in a quarter, too, where European influence is little likely 40 StNote| the folk) and in modern European folk literature.~XXV. THE 41 StNote| faithful friend, are common European, though the calm attempt