literary document

  • 21Malayalam — മലയാളം malayāḷam Malayalam in Malayalam script …

    Wikipedia

  • 22SEMITIC LANGUAGES — SEMITIC LANGUAGES, the name given by A.L. Schloezer in 1781 to the language family to which Hebrew belongs because the languages then reckoned among this family (except Canaanite) were spoken by peoples included in Genesis 10:21–29 among the sons …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 23Yiddish language — Not to be confused with Hebrew language. Yiddish ייִדיש yidish Pronunciation [ˈjɪdɪʃ] Spoken in United States, Israel, Argentina …

    Wikipedia

  • 24Epistle to the Hebrews — Books of the New Testament …

    Wikipedia

  • 25Henry James, Sr. — Henry James Sr. (June 3, 1811, Albany, New York December 18, 1882, Boston, Massachusetts) was an American theologian and Swedenborgian, best known as the father of the philosopher William James, novelist Henry James, and diarist Alice… …

    Wikipedia

  • 26Indo-Iranian languages —       group of languages constituting the easternmost major branch of the Indo European family of languages. Indo Aryan (Indic) languages (Indo Aryan languages) are spoken by some 800 million persons in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal,… …

    Universalium

  • 27Machaut, Guillaume de — (ca. 1300–1377)    Machaut was the most prolific and most influential 14th century French poet and composer, setting an example with his narrative dits (narratives with interspersed lyric poems) that was followed by poets both in France and… …

    Encyclopedia of medieval literature

  • 28Noticia de Torto — The Notícia de Torto [Notice about (the damage, offense, injury) old Portuguese] is a minuta of a notarial document written in the first decades of the 13th century, and though it does not contain any date it has been dated as between 1211 and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 29Ibrahim 'Ali Salman — (‎إبراهيم علي سلمان‎), poet of the Manasir Ibrahim Ali Salman (‎إبراهيم علي سلمان‎) (died March 30, 1995) is the most famous contemporary poet of the Arab Manasir who inhabit the area of the Fourth Cataract of the Nile in Northern Sudan. He is… …

    Wikipedia

  • 30Gothic — Goth ic, n. 1. The language of the Goths; especially, the language of that part of the Visigoths who settled in Moesia in the 4th century. See {Goth}. [1913 Webster] Note: Bishop Ulfilas or Walfila translated most of the Bible into Gothic about… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English