A meticulous grammar of an overlooked tongue. Language and memory, preserved anew. Lionel Burrows' Ho Grammar, With Vocabulary stands as a ho language grammar guide and a descriptive linguistics reference. Concise yet resolute, it lays out grammatical structure with illustrative paradigms and couples that analysis with a practical tribal language vocabulary so a reader may compare form and lexicon side by side. The tone is direct and observant: accessible to curious general readers while precise enough for inclusion in any serious language study collection interested in the indigenous languages of India and the study of minority speech. Its careful renderings of forms make it a natural point of departure for comparative work. As a record made in the colonial era, the volume occupies an instructive place in nineteenth-century linguistics and in colonial-era India studies. It offers contemporary workers in south asian linguistics a compact comparative grammar resource, and it remains a usable descriptive linguistics reference for academic language research into syntax, morphology and lexical inventory. Field linguists will recognise the practical logic of the arrangement; teachers and students will find it a helpful companion to broader language families. Importantly, its vocabulary and notes are a primary asset for projects in endangered languages preservation and for those undertaking linguistic fieldwork manual exercises or revitalisation work among tribal communities. Because Burrows recorded both grammatical patterns and lexical items in situ, modern scholars can trace regional affinities and inform typological comparison. That empirical clarity makes the book a dependable point of departure for archival reconstruction and for community-led teaching and revitalisation initiatives. For casual readers intrigued by linguistic history and for classic-literature collectors seeking meaningful heritage titles, Burrows' book balances readable prose with archival rigour. Casual readers will appreciate its brisk observational voice; scholars and collectors will prize its documentary value as a primary source for south asian linguistics and for academic language research into lesser-documented tongues. Its presence in a private or institutional language study collection deepens conversations around india colonial era studies and supports contemporary projects in endangered languages preservation. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.
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