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Page "Altaic languages" ¶ 9
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Ramstedt's and Einführung
Note: This list is limited to linguists who have worked specifically on the Altaic problem since the publication of the first volume of Ramstedt's Einführung in 1952.

two-volume and magnum
Rebbe Nachman's magnum opus is the two-volume Likutei Moharan ( Collected of Our Teacher and Rabbi, Nachman ), a collection of 411 lessons displaying in-depth familiarity and understanding of the many overt and esoteric concepts embedded in Tanakh, Talmud, Midrash, Zohar and Kabbalah.
Before leaving St. Olaf College, he completed work on his magnum opus, the two-volume Systematic Theology ( 1997 99 ), which has since been widely regarded as one of the most important and creative recent works of systematic theology.

two-volume and die
In 1781, at the suggestion of his friend Moses Mendelssohn, Dohm published a two-volume work entitled Über die Bürgerliche Verbesserung der Juden (" On the Civil Improvement of the Jews "), which argued for Jewish political equality on humanitarian grounds.
According to Machlup, such usage first appears in the 1935 English translation of Hecksher's 1931 book Merkantilismen ( Mercantilism in English ), and independently in Gaedicke's and von Eyern's 1933 two-volume study Die produktionswirtschaftliche Integration Europas: Eine Untersuchung über die Aussenhandelsverflechtung der europäischen Länder.

two-volume and Introduction
Diaconis left home at 14 to travel with sleight-of-hand legend Dai Vernon, and dropped out of high school, promising himself that he would return one day so that he could learn all of the math necessary to read William Feller's famous two-volume treatise on probability theory, An Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications.

two-volume and Linguistics
Langacker develops the central ideas of Cognitive Grammar in his seminal, two-volume Foundations of Cognitive Grammar, which became a major departure point for the emerging field of Cognitive Linguistics.
Langacker develops the central ideas of cognitive grammar in his seminal, two-volume Foundations of cognitive grammar, which became a major departure point for the emerging field of Cognitive Linguistics.

two-volume and was
Esquisse d ’ un Programme was published in the two-volume proceedings Geometric Galois Actions ( Cambridge University Press, 1997 ).
As Donald Creighton ( who penned a two-volume biography of Macdonald in the 1950s ) wrote, " law was a broad, well-trodden path to comfort, influence, even to power ".
Josephus's Against Apion is a two-volume defence of Judaism as classical religion and philosophy, stressing its antiquity, as opposed to what Josephus claimed was the relatively more recent tradition of the Greeks.
Paul Allen edited a two-volume history of the Lewis and Clark expedition that was published in 1814, in Philadelphia, but without mention of the actual author, banker Nicholas Biddle.
His penultimate enthusiasm was with the genitalia of butterflies about which he published a paper in the Transactions of the Linnean Society But before his death he returned to rotifera, much of his research appearing in a two-volume study with another zoologist, C. T.
In 2007, Jefferson's two-volume 1764 edition of the Quran was used by Rep. Keith Ellison for his swearing in to the House of Representatives.
It did not appear in the literature until 1887, when it was used by the schoolmaster Hermann Schiller in a two-volume handbook on the Roman Empire, Geschichte der Römischen Kaiserzeit.
Surviving preliminary materials show that Newton ( up to some time in 1685 ) conceived his book as a two-volume work: The first volume was to be ' De motu corporum, Liber primus ', with contents that later appeared ( in extended form ) as Book 1 of the ' Principia '.
When Jean got home and opened the wrapping, instead of the Berthoud books, what appeared before his eyes was a two-volume set on magic called Scientific Amusements.
A two-volume edition, abridged by John Terraine to omit battles outside the European continent, was published in 1970 by Picador: ths is not to be confused with the original edition of 1939-40, also in two volumes, of which the three volume edition is a substantial revision, as described in its Preface.
A two-volume 125-page Directory of Civil Service Guidance was published in 2000 to replace the previous Guidance on Guidance, providing short summaries of guidance on a wide range of issues and pointing to more detailed sources.
T. Corey Brennan, in his two-volume study of the praetorship, argues that during the military crisis of the 240s the second praetorship was created to make another holder of imperium available for command and provincial administration inter peregrinos.
The album title was derived from the two-volume book of the same name by Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard, whose works generally deal with themes such as existential despair, angst, death, and God.
But Fassbinder's TV series Berlin Alexanderplatz was a naturalistic adaptation of the two-volume novel by Alfred Döblin, which Fassbinder had read many times.
Syme's next great work was his definitive two-volume biography of Tacitus ( 1958 ), his favorite among the ancient historians.
Velleius Paterculus was a historian and contemporary of Sejanus whose two-volume The Roman History details a history of Rome from the fall of Troy until the death of Livia Augusta in 29.
In the following year, 1824, it was republished as Volume 1 of the two-volume set Vaterländischer Künstlerverein, the second volume comprising the 50 variations by 50 other composers.
* Arthur Edward Waite, member and later head of the Golden Dawn, wrote the Hermetic Museum and later the Hermetic Museum Restored and Enlarged and did the editing for Hermetic and Alchemical Writings of Paracelsus that was published as a two-volume set.
Just as one of the great works of the Revolutionary period was written by a Frenchman, so too was one of the great works about America from this generation, viz., Alexis de Tocqueville's two-volume Democracy in America, which ( like the colonial explorers ) described his travels through the young country, making observations about the relations between democracy, liberty, equality, individualism and community.
A compilation of his recorded work, The Ministry Years, was released as a two-volume set in 1987 and 1988 and included five previously unreleased songs.
Thorpe's two-volume edition of Florence of Worcester was issued in 1848 9.
A two-volume study by Arthur Freeman and Janet Ing Freeman, published in 2004, re-examines the evidence and concludes yet again that Collier was a forger.
An two-volume anime OVA adaptation was produced by Victor Entertainment.

two-volume and published
Originally published in a two-volume edition, this work studies the books of the Hebrew prophets.
Hutton published a two-volume version of his ideas in 1795 ( Vol.
They published In 1816 1818 a collection of legends culled from diverse sources and published the two-volume Deutsche Sagen ( German Legends ).
He published a large work, available in a two-volume English translation as Feudal Society.
In 1873 Heaviside had encountered James Clerk Maxwell's newly published, and today famous, two-volume Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism.
In light of this, the Indian guru Paramahansa Yogananda, author of Autobiography of a Yogi, scribed an extensive commentary on the Gospels published in the two-volume set The Second Coming of Christ: The Resurrection of the Christ Within You.
One of his students, Camille Vallaux, wrote the two-volume book Géographie sociale, published in 1908 and 1911.
* Dr. James Fordyce's two-volume compendium, Sermons for Young Women, is published.
References: For more information about the historical employment of vibrato by classical vocalists, see Michael Scott's two-volume survey The Record of Singing ( published by Duckworth, London, in 1977 and 1979 ); John Potter's Tenor: History of a Voice ( Yale University Press, New Haven & London, 2009 ); and Herman Klein's 30 Years of Music in London ( Century, New York, 1903 ).
In 1825 the Irish writer Thomas Moore published a two-volume sympathetic biography Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan which became a major influence on subsequent perceptions of him.
Shea went on to write historical action novels, including Shike ( 1981 ), a two-volume novel set in Ancient Japan about the warrior monk Jebu and his love Lady Shima Taniko, All Things Are Lights ( 1986 ), and The Saracen, a novel published in two volumes in 1989 depicting the struggle between a blond Muslim warrior called Daoud ibn Abdullah and his French crusader adversary Simon de Gobignon.
Robert Smith also published a two-volume monograph on " The Pottery of Mayapan " in 1971 ( Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 66, Harvard University ).
In 1784, he published a two-volume version of his Letters from an American Farmer, enlarged and completely rewritten in French.
*, two-volume unabridged version, published by Longmans & Green in 1899, and abridged to one volume in 1902 ; unabridged two volume version to be republished by St. Augustine's Press in 2008, ISBN 1-58731-700-1-also available at the Gutenberg Project
A two-volume Supplement of new vocabulary, published in 1909, completed the dictionary.
A two-volume " Index of Numbers ", correlating inscription numbers with volume numbers, was published in 2003.

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