Academic literature on the topic 'Horace H'

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Journal articles on the topic "Horace H"

1

Marshall, C. W. "H. G. Wells and Horace." Notes and Queries 65, no. 3 (2018): 405–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjy080.

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2

Shawe, D. J. "Gerard David Horace Shawe." BMJ 326, no. 7395 (2003): 934h—934. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.326.7395.934/h.

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3

Harrington, Janice N. "Newly Discovered Portrait of America’s First Black President: After Horace H. Pippin (1888–1946)." Callaloo 37, no. 4 (2014): 874. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cal.2014.0143.

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4

Guy, John. "The Dorothy and Horace Quaritch Wales Bequest — A Note." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 5, no. 1 (1995): 91–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186300013511.

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The Royal Asiatic Society has recently been a beneficiary from the estate of Mrs Dorothy Wales, widow of H. G. Quaritch Wales, the erudite scholar of early Southeast Asian history who died in 1981. The occasion of this bequest, the contents of which are discussed in the Librarian's report herein (pp. 169–70), prompts this note on the contribution of Quaritch Wales to Southeast Asian studies.Quaritch Wales was born in 1900 and educated at Charterhouse and Queens' College, Cambridge. He immediately embarked on a career in Southeast Asia, from which he was never to be deflected. At the age of 23 he entered the service of the Siamese Government where he served from 1924 to 1928 as an adviser to the courts of King Rama VI and King Rama VII. The first-hand knowledge gained from this experience formed the basis of his pioneering study Siamese State Ceremonies (1931), which remains a work of unrivalled insight into the Brahmanical rituals and Buddhist accretions of Thai kingship. He followed this with another work based on his experiences of Thai court and state functions, Ancient Siamese Government and Administration (1934).
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5

Rangachari, P. K. "Texts in context: Horace Davenport, carbonic anhydrase, and gastric acid secretion." Advances in Physiology Education 31, no. 2 (2007): 140–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/advan.00083.2006.

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Many standard textbooks of physiology have a diagram that shows the transporting elements that lead to the secretion of HCl by the parietal cell. The transporters are neatly aligned, and students see an elegant mechanism that neatly balances the ions to maintain electroneutrality. They little realize the time and effort required to tease out each of those steps bit by bit. This essay uses three papers by Horace Davenport to highlight the experimental evidence for a crucial step in that process: the generation of H+ and HCO3− through the agency of carbonic anhydrase. All three papers form part of the classic papers available through the American Physiological Society Legacy Project.
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6

Gross, Charles G. "Discoveries in the Human Brain: Neuroscience Prehistory, Brain Structure, and Function. Louise H. Marshall , Horace W. Magoun." Quarterly Review of Biology 74, no. 1 (1999): 61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/392958.

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7

Perlmann, Joel. "The American Jewish Future after Immigration and Ethnicity Fade: H. A. Wolfson’s Analysis in 1918." Religions 9, no. 11 (2018): 372. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel9110372.

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H. A. Wolfson arrived in the United States at 16 from the Lithuanian region of the Russian Empire and at Harvard as a freshman five years later. He remained at Harvard until his death in 1974, as Emeritus Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy. Among the most important historians of western religious philosophy, he published on contemporary issues only until 1925 and even then only rarely. Nevertheless, his 1918 article, “Pomegranates”, deserves attention. Wolfson clearly followed debates about the American ethnic future. He carved out an original and unexpected position on that issue, and on the American Jewish future within that context. He perceptively rejected Horace Kallen’s views of a “multi-national America”, and like Israel Zangwill’s Melting Pot, he stressed that full cultural and political assimilation would occur in the United States. But unlike Zangwill, he argued that Jewish religious creativity would find a long-term place in American life, once freed of its national trappings. Strongly supporting a Hebraic renaissance and a Jewish homeland in Palestine, he also emphasized with great force that the “we”—the east-European Jewish intellectuals and the Zionists—had greatly misunderstood the promise of Reform Judaism for the diaspora.
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8

Moul, Victoria. "H.-C. GÜNTHER (ED.), BRILL'S COMPANION TO HORACE. Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2013. Pp. xv + 630. isbn9789004223622. €180.00/US$258.00." Journal of Roman Studies 104 (October 13, 2014): 319–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0075435814000732.

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9

Hutchinson, G. O. "H. Dettmer, Horace: A Study in Structure (Altertumswissenschaftliche Texte und Studien XII). Hildesheim, etc.: Olms-Weidmann, 1983. Pp. xxvii + 573." Journal of Roman Studies 75 (November 1985): 313–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/300714.

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10

MORENO PAZ, MARÍA DEL CARMEN. "El origen de la novela gótica inglesa y su recepción en Francia: análisis traductológico de The Castle of Otranto (1764) de H. Walpole y su primera traducción al francés (1767)." Hikma 14 (October 7, 2015): 95. http://dx.doi.org/10.21071/hikma.v14i.5202.

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El presente trabajo tiene como principal objetivo el estudio y análisis de la considerada como primera novela gótica en inglés, The Castle of Otranto (1764), de Horace Walpole, y la primera traducción realizada en francés por Marc-Antoine Eidous en 1767 como Le Château d’Otrante, dada la importancia de esta obra como germen de la literatura gótica, que supuso un acercamiento al prerromanticismo y una ruptura con los valores ilustrados del siglo XVIII. Por este motivo, con este estudio pretendemos llevar a cabo un análisis que nos permita establecer conclusiones sobre la adecuación de la traducción en relación con las corrientes literarias y estéticas de la época y la repercusión que tuvo la obra en Francia a finales del siglo XVIII. Para ello, llevaremos a cabo un análisis traductológico según los distintos niveles de lengua: morfosintáctico, léxico-semántico y pragmático-cultural, en los que distinguiremos las principales técnicas de traducción empleadas y los posibles errores cometidos por el traductor.
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