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1921, Edward Sapir, chapter VII, in Language: An Introduction to the Study of Speech:
The human world is contracting not only prospectively but to the backward-probing eye of culture-history. Nevertheless we are as yet far from able to reduce the riot of spoken languages to a small number of “stocks.”
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1595, Samuel Daniel, “(please specify the folio number)”, in The First Fowre Bookes of the Ciuile Wars between the Two Houses of Lancaster and Yorke, London: P Short for Simon Waterson, →OCLC:
Now he exact of all, wastes in delight, / Riots in pleasure, and neglects the law.
1794, Robert Southey, Wat Tyler. A Dramatic Poem. In Three Acts, London: J M‘Creery, for Sherwood, Neely, and Jones,, published 1817, →OCLC, Act I, page 21:
Think of the insults, wrongs, and contumelies, / Ye bear from your proud lords—that your hard toil / Manures their fertile fields—you plow the earth, / You sow the corn, you reap the ripen'd harvest,— / They riot on the produce!— […]