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The discussion is liberally illustrated with examples , which make it possible to see the application of the generalizations . In some cases , inadequacies in the treatment may be corrected by study of the examples .
The discussion is liberally illustrated with examples , which make it possible to see the application of the generalizations . In some cases , inadequacies in the treatment may be corrected by study of the examples .
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10 % Typical examples are : ' they found a woman's handkerchief as a clue ' ( 7095 ) ' the month's time that I have lost ' ( 9027 ) ... ( Subjective ) There was but one example of the genitive inflection on a noun before a gerund .
10 % Typical examples are : ' they found a woman's handkerchief as a clue ' ( 7095 ) ' the month's time that I have lost ' ( 9027 ) ... ( Subjective ) There was but one example of the genitive inflection on a noun before a gerund .
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Furthermore the statis- tics of our author are sometimes meaningless when compared with those of other scholars , because they are incommensurable : Keniston finds 3-14 as opposed to 1-1 examples of the historical infinitive without á ...
Furthermore the statis- tics of our author are sometimes meaningless when compared with those of other scholars , because they are incommensurable : Keniston finds 3-14 as opposed to 1-1 examples of the historical infinitive without á ...
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Inhalt
CONTENTS OF VOLUME | 1 |
Dz and EU in Germanic Strong Preterits | 11 |
Celtic Notes | 21 |
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American appears assume become Beow beside breaking cited common compared connection consonant course derived dialects discussion distinction elements ending English etymology evidence examples existence explained expressed fact final forms frequent further genitive Germanic gerund give given Goth grade Greek hand historical Hittite indicated Indo-European influence initial interpretation king languages later Latin less linguistic meaning middle nasal noun object occur original parallel passage perhaps person phonetic plural position possible preceding present probably PROFESSOR reason reference relation represented root Sanskrit seems semantic sense short similar Society sound stem stop suffix suggested syllable tion University verb voiced vowel word writing þat