Language, Bände 1-3George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1964 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 70
Seite 232
... final n of unstressed inflectional syl- lables . Disregarding all but the gross differences , we can recognise three types of distribution to one or the other of which the various texts tend , in the roughest way and in varying degrees ...
... final n of unstressed inflectional syl- lables . Disregarding all but the gross differences , we can recognise three types of distribution to one or the other of which the various texts tend , in the roughest way and in varying degrees ...
Seite 233
... final n is nearly always retained . In the London English of Chaucer there is complete loss of final n in the singular of weak nouns . There is also complete loss of the nasal in both the strong and weak adjective inflection , except ...
... final n is nearly always retained . In the London English of Chaucer there is complete loss of final n in the singular of weak nouns . There is also complete loss of the nasal in both the strong and weak adjective inflection , except ...
Seite 256
... final n was so much more stable in verb forms than in noun and adjective forms thru- out the eleventh and twelfth centuries is obviously relevant to the con- clusions apparently indicated by the data presented here in regard to loss of ...
... final n was so much more stable in verb forms than in noun and adjective forms thru- out the eleventh and twelfth centuries is obviously relevant to the con- clusions apparently indicated by the data presented here in regard to loss of ...
Inhalt
World Languages | 1 |
CONTENTS OF VOLUME I | 7 |
Abstracts | 13 |
30 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent adjective American analogy animal antepenult appears Association Avest Bloomfield Bolling Brugmann Calif century Chicago classical College Collitz Commodian conjugation corresponding dialects diphthong edition ending English etymology example Executive Committee expression fact FM Dr FM Prof French George German Grammar Grammatik Greek Grimm's Law Grundriss Hermann Collitz Hittite ictus Indo-European Indo-European languages inscription Johns Hopkins Kent language Latin Leonard Bloomfield Linguistic Society Lydian meaning Meillet Mexican Spanish nasal nominative noun object Ohio Ohio State University original Oscan pattern Pennsylvania penult person Phil Philadelphia Philology phonetic plural prefix present Professor pronoun pronunciation reduplication Romance Langs Sanskrit Sapir scholars seems semantema semantic Semitic singular Society of America sound stem Sturtevant suffix syllabic consonants syllable thou tion tone University verb verse vigesimal vowel words Yale York City