(DOWNLOAD) "Complete Folklore and Popular Religion of Walter W. Skeat (Illustrated)" by Walter W. Skeat # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Complete Folklore and Popular Religion of Walter W. Skeat (Illustrated)
- Author : Walter W. Skeat
- Release Date : January 18, 2016
- Genre: Asia,Books,History,Reference,Dictionaries & Thesauruses,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 11780 KB
Description
A pre-eminent English philologist of his time, and was instrumental in developing English as a higher education subject in the United Kingdom.
Contents
English Dialects From the Eighth Century to the Present Day (1911)
Malay Magic (1900)
English Dialects From the Eighth Century to the Present Day (1911)-
The evidence, which is necessarily somewhat imperfect, goes to show that the older dialects appear to have been few in number, each being tolerably uniform over a wide area; and that the rather numerous dialects of the present day were gradually developed by the breaking up of the older groups into subdialects. This is especially true of the old Northumbrian dialect, in which the speech of Aberdeen was hardly distinguishable from that of Yorkshire, down to the end of the fourteenth century; soon after which date, the use of it for literary purposes survived in Scotland only. The chief literary dialect, in the earliest period, was Northumbrian or “Anglian,” down to the middle of the ninth century. After that time our literature was mostly in the Southern or Wessex dialect, commonly called “Anglo-Saxon,” the dominion of which lasted down to the early years of the thirteenth vi century, when the East Midland dialect surely but gradually rose to pre-eminence, and has now become the speech of the empire. Towards this result the two great universities contributed not a little. I proceed to discuss the foreign elements found in our dialects, the chief being Scandinavian and French.
Malay Magic (1900)
Briefly, the purpose of the author has been to collect into a Book of Malay Folklore all that seemed to him most typical of the subject amongst a considerable mass of materials, some of which lay scattered in the pages of various other works, others in unpublished native manuscripts, and much in notes made by him personally of what he had observed during several years spent in the Malay Peninsula, principally in the State of Selangor. The book does not profess to be an exhaustive or complete treatise, but rather, as its title indicates, an introduction to the study of Folklore, Popular Religion, and Magic as understood among the Malays of the Peninsula.