| Isaac Disraeli - 1841 - 428 pàgines
...(versionem) tam diu neglexisse quum vel linguae causa ipsis in pretio esse debeat." — Sib. Lat., v., 321. The emancipation of the national language was subsequently...the English tongue hath in modern days begun to be honorably enlarged and adorned, and for the better understanding of the people the common idiom should... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1842 - 364 pàgines
...(versionem) tam diu Beglexissequum vel lingua; causaipsis in pretio essedebeat."—Bib. jjat.,v.32l. If we place by the side of the text of Wickliffe our...enlarged and adorned, and for the better understanding of thepeople the common idiom should be exercised in writing:" this was at once setting aside the Norman-French... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1842 - 366 pàgines
...(versionem) tain diu ueglexisse quum vel lingua; causa ipsis in pretio ease debeat."—Bib. Lat.,v. 321. If we place by the side of the text of Wickliffe our...enlarged and adorned, and for the better understanding of thepeople the common idiom should be exercised in writing:" this was at once setting aside the Norman-French... | |
| Thomas Budd Shaw - 1849 - 478 pàgines
...great sovereign to the Company of Brewers in London, containing the following remarkable expressions: "The English tongue hath in modern days begun to be...better understanding of the people the common idiom is to be exercised in writing." It also appears by the same document that many of the craft to whom... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1855 - 432 pàgines
...(versionem) tam diu neglexisse quum vel linguee causa ipsis in pretio esse debeat."— Sib. Lot., v., 321. The emancipation of the national language was subsequently...in our literary history has recently been disclosed ol Henry V. To encourage the use of the vernacular tongue, this monarch, in a letter missive to one... | |
| Thomas Budd Shaw - 1866 - 484 pàgines
...great sovereign to the Company of Brewers in London, containing the following remarkable expressions: " The English tongue hath in modern days begun to be...better understanding of the people the common idiom is to be exercised in -writing." It also appears by the same document that many of the. craft to whom... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1880 - 888 pàgines
...Douce; and I have heard, with great satiifiutiou, that it will probably be edited by Sir Francis Madden. The emancipation of the national language -was subsequently...the English tongue hath in modern days begun to be honorably enlarged and adorned; and, for the better understanding of the people, the common idiom should... | |
| Ralph Flenley - 1911 - 216 pàgines
...ordinance of the Brewers' Company in the capital, who decree that 'whereas our mother tongue, to wit, the English tongue, hath in modern days begun to be honourably enlarged and adorned . . . and our most excellent lord, king Henry V, hath . . . for the better understanding of his people, with... | |
| J. Otway-Ruthven - 1939 - 218 pàgines
...when in 1422 they decided to keep their records in English they said that 'our mother-tongue, to wit the English tongue, hath in modern days begun to be honourably enlarged and adorned for that our most excellent lord, king Henry V, hath in his letters missive. . .more willingly chosen... | |
| Jeffrey N. Cox, Larry J. Reynolds, Larry John Reynolds - 1993 - 360 pàgines
...records in English, they explained (in Latin!) that they had done so because our mother-tongue, to wit the English tongue, hath in modern days begun to be honourably enlarged and adorned, for that our most excellent lord, King Henry V, hath in his letters missive and divers touching his... | |
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