Modernist scholars do not reject these tools, but they make two emendations. |
|
Most of these editorial emendations, very few of which are supported by textual notes, would have been better left unmade. |
|
The text itself is ancient, handicapped by scribal errors and emendations of hostile censors over the centuries. |
|
Other emendations, while also worthwhile, consist more of refinements addressed to specialists than to general readers. |
|
An amusing instance of his classical emendations occurs in the text of Shakspeare. |
|
Churchill's clarifications and emendations, convincing or otherwise, are not likely to mollify his opponents. |
|
Finally there is the considerable group of emendations in the Centenary text that were introduced by the editor. |
|
Naturally, this critical simplification of mine calls for numerous emendations. |
|
Such emendations to the 'classics' on the part of famous conductors were once common practice. |
|
Compositors often introduced changes in spelling and punctuation, and sometimes made substantive emendations as well. |
|
This change also would necessitate emendations to some of the diagnoses for these higher level taxa. |
|
The textual apparatus records scribal alterations and editorial emendations as specified above. |
|
If our readers can supply emendations or corrections, we would be pleased to receive them. |
|
I will be grateful to receive emendations and further items. |
|
Sabellico's emendations to Pliny were being broadcast and discussed by his students long before he published them. |
|
It has a dual critical apparatus with textual emendations separated from the manuscript and versional variants. |
|
Polo also seems to have made emendations himself on various copies of the work during the last 20 years or so of his life. |
|
This work also contains Valla's celebrated emendations to the text of the Roman historian Livy. |
|
Who among us would acknowledge that our best emendations are guesses? |
|
Recently the final emendations which scholarship has made in Luther's famous translation were presented to Emperor William. |
|
|
Dozens of manuscripts dating from the 6th to 8th centuries and three emendations as late as the 9th century have survived. |
|
Study of the emendations reveals a close relationship among all 24 psalters, and variant readings have provided evidence with which to construct a tentative stemma. |
|
The trouble lay in the fact that Balzac tended to expand and amplify his original story by making emendations after it had been typeset by the printers. |
|
It is now absolutely critical that its emendations be adopted. |
|
To our secretary, Noƫlla C. Benoit, goes our profound admiration and gratitude for her inexhaustible patience through repeated emendations to our text. |
|
In 1734 Theobald produced his own edition of Shakespeare in seven volumes, often using Elizabethan parallels as a guide to some brilliant emendations. |
|
Some of the errors in the book may have been compositorial emendations. |
|
The text of Urry's edition has often been criticised by subsequent editors for its frequent conjectural emendations, mainly to make it conform to his sense of Chaucer's metre. |
|