Encyclopedia Of General Knowledge By Jahangir Success Series Pdf

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Aquilino Neadstine

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Jul 16, 2024, 9:15:15 AM7/16/24
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Alternative dates for Ramses II.: Maspero, The Struggle ofthe Nations (1897), p. 449, c. 1320-1255; Breasted (1906),1292-1225; Meyer (1909), 1310-1244. Attempts have been made toidentify the Khabiri, who are mentioned often in the Tel el-Amarnaletters as foes, threatening to invade Palestine and bring the Egyptiansupremacy over it to an end, with the Hebrews. The Exodus, ithas been pointed out, might then be placed under Amen-hotep II.(1448-1420 B.C., Breasted; 1449-1423, Petrie), the successor ofThothmes, and more time would be allowed for the events betweenthe Exodus and the time of David (c. 1000), which, if the date givenabove be correct, have been thought to be unduly compressed (seeOrr in the Expositor, March 1897, p. 161 ff.); but there aredifficulties attaching to this view, and it has not been adoptedgenerally by scholars. There may be some ultimate connexion betweenthe Khabiri and the Hebrews; but the Khabiri of the Tel el-Amarnaletters cannot be the Hebrews who invaded Canaan under Joshua.

Encyclopedia Of General Knowledge By Jahangir Success Series Pdf


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The work of the revisers was received without enthusiasm.It was too thorough for the majority of religious people.Partisans found that havoc had been played with their prooftexts. Ecclesiastical conservatives were scandalized by thefreedom with which the traditional text was treated. Theadvocates of change were discontented with the hesitatingacceptance which their principles had obtained. The mostvulnerable side of the revision was that on which the mass ofEnglish readers thought itself capable of forming a judgment.The general effect of so many small alterations was to spoilthe familiar sonorous style of the Authorized Version. The changeswere freely denounced as equally petty and vexatious; theywere, moreover, too often inconsistent with the avowed principlesof the revisers. The method of determining readings andrenderings by vote was not favourable to the consistency andliterary character of the Version. A whole literature of criticismand apology made its appearance, and the achievement of somany years of patient labour seemed destined to perish in a stormof resentments. On the whole, the Revised Version weatheredthe storm more successfully than might have been expected. Itsconsiderable excellences were better realized by students thanstated by apologists. The hue and cry of the critics largely diedaway, and was replaced by a calmer and juster appreciation.

There is a long series of transitive verbs formed from intransitivesand of causal verbs formed from transitives, generally by addingāb (Skr. āpaya-, Pr. āvē-). Compound verbs are numerous. Noteworthyis the desiderative compound formed by adding the rootcāh, wish, to the dative of a verbal noun. Thus,ham dēkhả-kē cahait-chī, I am wishing for the seeing, I wish to see.

The District of Bijnor has an area of 1791 sq. m. Theaspect of the country is generally a level plain, but the northernpart of it rises towards the Himalayas, the greatest elevationbeing 1342 ft. above the sea-level. The Koh and Ramganga arethe principal rivers that flow through the district, and theGanges forms its western boundary. In 1901 the populationwas 779,451, showing a decrease of 2% in the decade. Thecountry is watered in most parts by streams from the hills, buta series of small canals has been constructed. Sugar is largelyexported. A line of the Oudh & Rohilkhand railway fromMoradabad to Saharanpur runs through the district.

A Bill of Peace is, in equity, a suit brought by a person toestablish and perpetuate a right which he claims, and whichfrom its nature may be controverted by different persons atdifferent times and by different actions; or where several attemptshave already been unsuccessfully made to overthrow the sameright, and justice requires that the party should be quieted inthe right if it is already sufficiently established. Bills of thisnature were usually filed where there was one general right tobe established against a great number of persons, or where oneperson claimed or defended a right against many, or where manyclaimed or defended a right against one. Thus, a bill mightbe filed by a parson for tithes against his parishioners; byparishioners against a parson to establish a modus; by a lordagainst tenants for an encroachment under colour of a commonright; or by tenants against a lord for disturbance of a commonright. Bills were also filed in cases where the plaintiff had, afterrepeated and satisfactory trials, established his right at law,and yet was in danger of further litigation and obstruction tohis right from new attempts to controvert it. Actions in thenature of bills of peace are still maintainable.

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