The Online Books Page

Browsing subject area: Algonquin language -- Etymology (Include extended shelves)
You can also browse an alphabetical list from this subject or from:

Algonquin language -- Etymology

See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.

Broader terms:
Filed under: Algonquin language -- Etymology

Items below (if any) are from related and broader terms.

Filed under: Algonquin language -- Grammar Filed under: Algonquian languages -- Etymology Filed under: Berber languages -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Celtic languages -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Etruscan language -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: French language -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Hungarian language -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Irish language -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Old Norse language -- Etymology -- NamesFiled under: Scottish Gaelic language -- Etymology -- Names Filed under: Chinese language -- Etymology -- DictionariesFiled under: Coptic language -- Etymology Filed under: Danish language -- Etymology -- DictionariesFiled under: Egyptian language -- EtymologyFiled under: English language -- Etymology Filed under: English language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: English language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries -- Early works to 1800Filed under: English language -- Canada -- Etymology -- DictionariesFiled under: English language -- India -- Etymology -- DictionariesFiled under: English language -- Middle English, 1100-1500 -- Etymology -- DictionariesFiled under: English language -- Obsolete wordsFiled under: French language -- EtymologyFiled under: Names, German -- Etymology Filed under: Germanic languages -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Scots language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Norwegian language (Nynorsk) -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Noos (The Greek word) Filed under: Hebrew language -- Etymology -- Early works to 1800
  • [Info] Epistola de Studii Targum Utilitate et de Linguae Chaldaicae, Misnicae, Talmudicae, Arabicae, Vocabulorum Item Nonnulorum Barbaricorum Convenientia cum Hebraea (in Hebrew with Latin notes; Paris: B. Duprat and D. Maisonneuve, 1857), by Judah Ibn Quraysh, ed. by J. J. L. Bargès and Baer ben Alexander Goldberg
Filed under: Indo-European languages -- Etymology Filed under: Latin language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Kami (The Japanese word)Filed under: Language and languages -- Etymology Filed under: Cognate words Filed under: Norwegian language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Scottish Gaelic language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries Filed under: Turkish language -- Etymology -- Dictionaries

Help with reading books -- Report a bad link -- Suggest a new listing

Home -- Search -- New Listings -- Authors -- Titles -- Subjects -- Serials

Books -- News -- Features -- Archives -- The Inside Story

Edited by John Mark Ockerbloom (onlinebooks@pobox.upenn.edu)
OBP copyrights and licenses.