Thomas Hewitt Key
#47,987
Most Influential Person Across History
British scholar
Thomas Hewitt Key's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Thomas Hewitt Keyliterature Degrees
Literature
#6281
Historical Rank
Classical Studies
#471
Historical Rank

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Literature
Thomas Hewitt Key's Degrees
- Bachelors Classics University of Oxford
- Masters Classics University of Oxford
Why Is Thomas Hewitt Key Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Thomas Hewitt Key, FRS was an English classical scholar. Life He was born in London and educated at St John's and Trinity Colleges, Cambridge, and graduated 19th wrangler in 1821. From 1825 to 1827 he was the founding professor of Pure mathematics in the University of Virginia; Key owned at least one slave during his time there. After his return to England was appointed in 1828 professor of Latin in the newly founded University of London.
Thomas Hewitt Key's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- On Vowel-Assimilation, especially in relation to Professor Willis's Experiment on Vowel-Sounds (1852) (6)
- On Greek Accentuation (1855) (6)
- On the Origin of the Demonstrative Pronouns, the Definite Article, the Pronouns of the Third Person, the Relative, and the Interrogative (1847) (2)
- I.—DAUGHTER AND FILLE—ARE THEY CONNECTED? (1866) (1)
- ACCENT A GUIDING PRINCIPLE, NOT MERELY OF THE OLD COMIC METRES, BUT GENERALLY OF LATIN POETRY; AND FIRST OF VIRGIL'S HEXAMETERS. (1874) (0)
- On the Origin of certain Latin Words (1848) (0)
- IX. —ON TITILLARE AND TIKTEIN. (1862) (0)
- On the Misuse of the terms Epenthesis and Euphony (1847) (0)
- “On the Latin Verb mittere, its Origin and Affinities; and generally on Verbs signifying ‘to go’ in the Indo-European Family;” (0)
- On the Pronouns of the First and Second Persons (0)
- IX.–ON THE GERMAN PREFIX VER AND ALLIED FORMS. (1867) (0)
- X.—THE ANGLO‐SAXON LANGUAGE &c. CALLED IN AID TO SUPPORT THE DOCTRINE WHICH ATTRIBUTES A SUFFIX AGH OR AG TO LATIN VERBS (1862) (0)
- XI‐RECONSIDERATION OF SUBSTANTIVES IN LET. (1862) (0)
- ON DIMINUTIVES. I. ENGLTSH (1856) (0)
- A SUPPLEMENTAL PAPER ON THE KELTIC SUFFIX AGH &c., AS OCCURRING IN LATIN, GREEK, AND OTHER RELATED LANGUAGES (1859) (0)
- The Lapp and Finn Tongues not unconnected with the Indo-European Family (0)
- A search in some European languages after the representatives of the Greek preposition ava as prefixed to verbs (1854) (0)
- ON THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE KELTIC SUFFIX AGH OR ACH LITTLE, IN THE LATIN VOCABULAIRY (1856) (0)
- A PARTIAL ATTEMPT TO RECONCILE THE: LAWS OF LATIN RHYTHM WITH THOSE OF MODERN LANGUAGES. (1869) (0)
- XIX. — MISCELLANEOUS REMARKS SUGGESTED BY RITSCHL'S PLAUTUS, ESPECIALLY ON THE FORMATION OF THE LATIN PERFECT. (1860) (0)
- “On the prepositions evt, in, and related words;” (1854) (0)
- X. ‐On PLURAL FORMS IN LATIN, WITH A SINGULAR MEANING, AND ESPECIALLY ON VIRGIL'S USE OF MENTA. (1867) (0)
- 1.–MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS (1862) (0)
- An Attempt to prove the identity of the Roots is, was, and be (1849) (0)
- On Some Of The Suffixes of Greek: And Latin Prepositions. (1869) (0)
- On the Nature of the Verb, particularly on the Formation of the Middle or Passive Voice (1851) (0)
- XXIII.–WORDS FORMED IN IMITATION OF THE SOUND KAR, AS HEAR,D IN SCRATCHING. (1867) (0)
- IV.–ON THE DERIVATION OF SON, NURUS, ANUS, UXOR, WIFE, HAσ, OMNIS, SOLUS, EVERY, ALL, ‘OdOσ’ (1869) (0)
- On apparent exceptions from the Triliteral form of monosyllabic roots (1847) (0)
- On the Names of the parts of the Human Body as common to the several Families of the Indo-European Language (1847) (0)
- A Latin-English dictionary printed from the unfinished ms. of the late Thomas Hewitt Key, M.A., F.R.S (0)
- I—ON THE FORMATION OF GREEK FUTURES AND FIRST AORISTS. (1867) (0)
- V.‐ON THE SO‐CALLED ‘A PRIVATIVVM.’ (1865) (0)
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