Language, Bände 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1925 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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Seite 4
... culture , is something much greater than a misfit combination of language plus literature . It may be well to add in passing that the British use of " philology " for linguistics leaves no name for the former subject and ought not be ...
... culture , is something much greater than a misfit combination of language plus literature . It may be well to add in passing that the British use of " philology " for linguistics leaves no name for the former subject and ought not be ...
Seite 16
... culture the study of lan- guages stands unrivalled among the various branches of instruction . Linguistics , to be sure , cannot in this respect boast of any exclusive merits , for the reason that it is impossible to study any ...
... culture the study of lan- guages stands unrivalled among the various branches of instruction . Linguistics , to be sure , cannot in this respect boast of any exclusive merits , for the reason that it is impossible to study any ...
Seite 17
... culture in southwestern Spain ( Plato's Atlantis ) may antedate the dawn of civilization in Babylonia and Egypt . The dynastic Egyptians may have been Caucasians , while the predynastic Egyptians were Semites . We have a suffix article ...
... culture in southwestern Spain ( Plato's Atlantis ) may antedate the dawn of civilization in Babylonia and Egypt . The dynastic Egyptians may have been Caucasians , while the predynastic Egyptians were Semites . We have a suffix article ...
Seite 18
... cultural life , was characteristic of earlier times . At the present time , many primitive languages show certain similari- ties which are not sufficiently detailed to permit the claim that they are members of the same linguistic family ...
... cultural life , was characteristic of earlier times . At the present time , many primitive languages show certain similari- ties which are not sufficiently detailed to permit the claim that they are members of the same linguistic family ...
Seite 52
... cultural status of the individual , or the anthro- pological status of the group , the study of the language mechanisms is taking on a new aspect . Language as a form of behavior through which the individual adjusts himself to a social ...
... cultural status of the individual , or the anthro- pological status of the group , the study of the language mechanisms is taking on a new aspect . Language as a form of behavior through which the individual adjusts himself to a social ...
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accent American analogy animal appears Association Avest Baltimore Bloomfield Brugmann Calif classical College Collitz Columbia Columbus Committee on Publications Commodian conjugation dialects diphthong edition EDWARD SAPIR English ESPINOSA example Executive Committee FM Dr FM Prof GEORGE MELVILLE BOLLING German grammar Greek Grimm's Law HERMANN COLLITZ Hittite ictus Indo-European Indo-European languages inscription JAIME DE ANGULO Journal Kent language Latin LEONARD BLOOMFIELD Linguistic Society Lydian meaning Mexican Spanish Modern monosyllabic nasal object Ohio State University original pattern penult person Philadelphia Philology phonetic plural prefix present Professor Roland pronoun pronunciation reduplication Roland G Romance Langs Sanskrit scholars semantema semantic Semitic singular SOCIETY OF AMERICA sound stem stress Sturtevant suffix syllabic consonants syllable thou tion tone Univ University of Pennsylvania verb verse vigesimal vowel words Yale York City
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 6 - American Museum of Natural History 77th Street, and Central Park West, New York City, New York, USA 1935 The University of London Library 1936 Central Library per Messrs.
Seite 3 - Our schools are conducted by persons who, from professors of education down to teachers in the classroom, know nothing of the results of linguistic science, not even the relation of writing to speech or of standard language to dialect. In short, they do not know what language is, and yet must teach it, and in consequence waste years of every child's life and reach a poor result.
Seite 153 - The vocal features common to same or partly same utterances are forms; the corresponding stimulus-reaction features are meanings. Thus a form is a recurrent vocal feature which has meaning, and a meaning is a recurrent stimulus- reaction feature which corresponds to a form.
Seite 152 - Psychology, in particular, gives us this series: to certain stimuli (A) a person reacts by speaking; his speech (B) in turn stimulates his hearers to certain reactions (C). By a social habit which every person acquires in infancy from his elders, ABC are closely correlated. Within this correlation, the stimuli (A) which cause an act of speech and the reactions (C) which result from it, are very closely linked, because every person acts indifferently as speaker or as hearer. We are free, therefore,...
Seite 9 - Such a science, however, exists; its aims are so well defined, its methods so well developed, and its past results so copious, that students of language feel as much need for a professional society as do adherents of any other science.
Seite 47 - To return to our phonetic patterns for C and D, we can now better understand why it is possible to consider a sibilant like...
Seite 39 - ... of studying the phonetic elements of speech are, of course, of considerable value, but they have sometimes the undesirable effect of obscuring the essential facts of speech-sound psychology. Too often an undue importance is attached to minute sound discriminations as such; and too often phoneticians do not realize that it is not enough to know that a certain sound occurs in a language, but that one must ascertain if the sound is a typical form or one of the points in its sound pattern, or is...
Seite 154 - Assumption SI. A phrase may contain a bound form which is not part of a word.,. For example, the possessive [z] in . the man I saw yesterday's daughter. ? Def. Such a bound form is a phraseformative. This assumption disturbs the definition of phrase above given. Strictly speaking, our assumptions and definitions would demand that we take the-man-I saw-yesterday's daughter as two words. Convenience of analysis makes an assumption like the present one preferable for English. A similar assumption might...
Seite 20 - ... of Latin and Greek. In The Value of the Classics (Princeton, 1917), edited by Professor Andrew F. West, numerous testimonials as to the helpfulness of the classics in mastering other subjects are given by men in almost all fields of human endeavor. In his Language and Philology (Boston, 1923) , Dr. Roland G. Kent, Professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Pennsylvania, has strikingly shown the tremendous debt of English to the classical languages, especially to Latin. In his address...