Language, Band 12George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1936 |
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Seite 204
... relative frequency , may be tentatively named the Law of Abbreviation ' ( 38 ) . There is nothing hard about this . Given an observed functional interrelation it is always possible to ' prove ' that one variable is the cause and the ...
... relative frequency , may be tentatively named the Law of Abbreviation ' ( 38 ) . There is nothing hard about this . Given an observed functional interrelation it is always possible to ' prove ' that one variable is the cause and the ...
Seite 207
... Relative Frequency on page 4 of his Relative Frequency . In the present book he derives it first for words , which is easier to do . Apparently he got the idea of the universality ( or versatility ) of the Law in the interesting fashion ...
... Relative Frequency on page 4 of his Relative Frequency . In the present book he derives it first for words , which is easier to do . Apparently he got the idea of the universality ( or versatility ) of the Law in the interesting fashion ...
Seite 286
... relative pronoun can be the subject of an adverbial clause , but neither the Latin original nor the variant readings lend any support to the view that se can be a demonstrative pronoun in a context where it is not the antecedent of a ...
... relative pronoun can be the subject of an adverbial clause , but neither the Latin original nor the variant readings lend any support to the view that se can be a demonstrative pronoun in a context where it is not the antecedent of a ...
Inhalt
I | 3 |
A A HILL Phonetic and Phonemic Change | 15 |
A A HILL Phonetic and Phonemic Change | 23 |
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ablaut adjective adorare American analogy aorist appears Aryan assume Brugmann cited consonant corresponding definition demonstrative derived dialects discussion dissimilation EDWARD SAPIR ending etymology evidence example explained fact forms French genitive German gesture Grammar Greek hand-kissing Hitt Hittite Hittite Language homonyms indicative Indo-European influence inscriptions instance interpretation KENT kiss language langue Latin Leonard Bloomfield lingua linguistic Linguistic Society meaning Middle English neuter noun Ohio State University original Oscan Pāli participle passage phoneme phonology plural present preterite primary probably Professor pronoun proskynesis relation ROLAND G Sanskrit SAPIR scholars secondary seems semantic Semitic Sicel sing singular Society of America sound speech stem Sturtevant suffix Swadesh syllable takku theory Tibetan tion Toch Tocharian Twaddell uomo variant velar Venetic verb voiceless vowel wæs Whatmough words Yale University Zipf þæt