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This has become popular, and is philologically possible; however, it does not convey the allusion to Joseph's office or merits which we should expect.
Now the boogerman is also philologically interesting, being actually one of the less than two hundred Indo-European root words.
Philologically considered, it is absurd.
I do contend, however, that it can not be proven philologically to be a modern-day forgery.
Also seen as the philologically incorrect Lacrymosa, it may also refer to:
Halpern also notes that the unusual syntax of the inscription makes this interpretaion philologically possible.
Anything sound philologically is owed to Professor Thomas Shippey; his lively enthusiasm has been of great help all along.
Philologically speaking there always remained a good deal of difference in the Deccan and northern India's Urdu.
'It is, philologically, historically, socially and politically.'
It continued to be known as "Norman French" until the end of the 19th century, even though philologically there was nothing Norman about it.
His hymns have been collected in the philologically more stable five-volume edition Grundtvigs Sang-Værk.
Whether the name Lén can be philologically related to the Romano-Celtic god Lenus is disputable.
Any classical language can be studied philologically, and indeed describing a language as "classical" is to imply the existence of a philological tradition associated with it.
Broadly speaking, Analysts tended to study the epics philologically, bringing to bear criteria, linguistic and otherwise, that were little different from those of the ancient Alexandrians.
Theologically unsound, dramaturgically weak, philologically impossible, zoologically rigged, salted conspicuously with gold, and shot through with anachronisms.
The dispute was primarily concerned with who can, philologically, be labelled as "Slovene", "Croat" and "Serb" with the aim of expanding one's national territory and influence.
Cunyu supported use of the Old Text Shujing despite some of its chapters being held as philologically suspicious: in his view, they were essential for social and political order.
His life work lay within a field that philologically equipped theologians had pursued relentlessly since the seventeenth century: the establishment of a complete valiorum edition of the scriptural texts.
These authors insist that the problems with the Chinese and Japanese documents can easily be resolved philologically (as common copyists' mistakes) and need not indicate unreliability of the Chinese observations.
Proponents of Sacred Name Bibles contend that their reputation is damaged by translators who reject the name Yahweh in favor of variants they regard as philologically and grammatically impossible.
The derivation of Karluk from Kara (Turkic "Great", "Northern", "black") is considered to be philologically impossible, and incompatible with the well-documented Arabic form of the ethnonym "Halluh".
The purpose of hymns of the Rigveda is ritualistic, not historiographical or ethnographical, and any information about the way of life or the habitat of their authors is incidental and philologically extrapolated from the context.
Kitchen observes that the word Shishak is closer philologically to Shoshenq I and that this Pharaoh records in his monuments at Thebes that he campaigned actively against Ancient Israel and Judah.
It has subsequently been noticed that "Cod" could derive philologically from a Brittonic female cogname "Cuda", which is the name of a mother goddess thought to have resided in the Cotswold region in Celtic mythology.
The word Mont, being philologically linked to mountain via old French and then Latin, readily gives the impression of a combination of height and might, while Rose acts as a visual representation of the totality of higher ideals.