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  1. Sir William Jones was a British Orientalist and jurist who did much to encourage interest in Oriental studies in the West. Of Welsh parentage, he studied at Harrow and University College, Oxford (1764–68), and learned Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, and Persian.

  2. Sir William Jones FRS FRAS FRSE (28 September 1746 – 27 April 1794) was a British philologist, orientalist and a puisne judge on the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal, and a scholar of ancient India.

  3. Sir William Jones was an Anglo-Welsh philologist, a scholar of ancient India and a puisne judge on the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal. He had respect for ancient Indian cultures and was mainly known for his Indo-European and he was also involved in the setup of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.

  4. William Jones (September 28, 1746 – April 27, 1794) was an English philologist and student of ancient India. He is particularly known for his proposition of the existence of a relationship among Indo-European languages.

  5. Jul 7, 2009 · In 1706 mathematics teacher William Jones first invented a symbol to represent the platonic concept of pi, an ideal that in numerical terms can be approached, but never reached.

  6. William Jones was a Welsh mathematician who corresponded with many of the important English mathematicians of his day.

  7. William Jones, one of the greatest linguistic prodigies of the eighteenth-century, thoroughly fluent in English, Welsh, Greek, Latin, Persian, Arabic, Hebrew, and Sanskrit, was through the influence of his patron, the Earl Spencer (Jones had been tutor to his son), appointed in 1783 to the lucrative office of a judge on the Supreme Court of ...

  8. Dec 12, 2019 · A master of 28 languages, Sir William Jones was the first to identify a strong link (and hence common roots) between Sanskrit and Latin in 1789. Famous as the founder of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Calcutta, Jones’s deep fascination for the subcontinent would set the ball rolling for many others like him – who dug deep to understand and ...

  9. The works of Sir William Jones. Author: Teignmouth, Lord. Publisher: Agam Prakashan, Delhi. Description: Vol.II- Memoirs of the life, writings and correspondence, of Sir William Jones. Source: Archaeological Survey of India, New Delhi. Type: E-Book. Received From: Archaeological Survey of India

  10. Sep 22, 2009 · We come now to Sir William Jones (1746–94), to whom so much credit for developments in historical linguistics has been given. Jones’ (1786 [1789]) famous “philologer” passage – that most momentous soundbite of yore – declared a relationship between Sanskrit and several other Indo-European languages, and is often cited as the ...

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