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Hence the Italian nation was always too learned, too literary to develop a folkliterature.
2
At that time much of the folkliterature of that continent was not as now available.
3
The narratives belong also to folkliterature.
4
Only through the folkliterature, however, can we get a glimpse of the working of the mind of the African Negro.
Usage of oral literature in English
1
She grew up in a conservative Catholic environment and went on to study history, oralliterature and linguistics.
2
The stories here given cover a wide range of subjects, but are fair examples of the oralliterature of the Blackfeet.
3
But its legends and records are known to have existed in the form of oralliterature from a much more ancient time.
4
Darach and Réamonn have a deep understanding of mythological material and oralliterature, having both produced critically acclaimed versions of The Táin.
5
Their oralliterature is, however, abundant, though it is only within quite recent years that it has become known to America and Europe.
6
While surviving as oralliterature for generations, the rhymes began to be published in books especially created for children in the early eighteenth century.
7
For a long time, the Maori did not have a written language, so genealogy was handed down through oralliterature and represented in art works.
8
Marie, and Lake Superior-Thewild rice plant-Indiantrade-American Fur Company-Distribution of presents-Death of Sassaba-Epitaph-Indiancapacity to count- Oralliterature-Research-Self-reliance.
9
(The term oralliterature is regarded as a sad oxymoron by linguists who specialize in oral cultures.)
10
Oralliterature, popular legends, ballads and rites, are all stifled in one word-superstition; and popular antiquities have become "fables" and "folk-lore."