Language, Bände 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1927 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 19
Seite 36
... Jespersen , Professor of English Philology at the University of Copenhagen , Denmark . A. Meillet , Secretary of the Société de Linguistique de Paris , Professor of Com- parative Grammar at the Collège de France and of Comparative ...
... Jespersen , Professor of English Philology at the University of Copenhagen , Denmark . A. Meillet , Secretary of the Société de Linguistique de Paris , Professor of Com- parative Grammar at the Collège de France and of Comparative ...
Seite 260
... Professor Worrell has given us a romantic and popular account of the ... Jespersen's demonstration ( Language , Chap . XI ) that sure instances of ... Professor Worrell is a Semitist , and the most valuable 260 Book Reviews.
... Professor Worrell has given us a romantic and popular account of the ... Jespersen's demonstration ( Language , Chap . XI ) that sure instances of ... Professor Worrell is a Semitist , and the most valuable 260 Book Reviews.
Seite 66
... Prof. Dr. A. Debrunner , Landgrafenstieg 5 , Jena , Germany . Société de Linguistique de Paris , à la Sorbonne , Paris V , France . HONORARY MEMBERS 1927 Prof. Dr. A. Debrunner , Landgrafenstieg 5 , Jena , Germany . 1927 Prof. Dr. Otto ...
... Prof. Dr. A. Debrunner , Landgrafenstieg 5 , Jena , Germany . Société de Linguistique de Paris , à la Sorbonne , Paris V , France . HONORARY MEMBERS 1927 Prof. Dr. A. Debrunner , Landgrafenstieg 5 , Jena , Germany . 1927 Prof. Dr. Otto ...
Seite 135
... Professor Jespersen . To the present reviewer he has been a constant inspiration for many years and still is one of ... Professor Jespersen arouses our opposition . He is speaking of the grammatical character of here in such expressions ...
... Professor Jespersen . To the present reviewer he has been a constant inspiration for many years and still is one of ... Professor Jespersen arouses our opposition . He is speaking of the grammatical character of here in such expressions ...
Seite 136
... Professor Jespersen is very fond of adding new gram- matical terms to our terminology . He here employs ' principal ' as a term for a word that has the function of a substantive but not its form . He explains his position more fully in ...
... Professor Jespersen is very fond of adding new gram- matical terms to our terminology . He here employs ' principal ' as a term for a word that has the function of a substantive but not its form . He explains his position more fully in ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American aorist Association Avesta Bolling BoSt Brugmann Calif Castilian Chicago Classical clause College Committee connection consonant Corpus Christi College Cuentos dative dative plural depués derived dialects Dictionary eleventh century ending etymology evidence examples explained fact FM Prof forms French Friedrich German Götze grammatical categories Greek Hittite Hrozný Indo-European inflection Italic language langue Latin Leonard Bloomfield Library linguistic Linguistic Society long vowel loss of final meaning Meillet Menéndez Pidal Messapic Middle English Modern occurs Ohio Old English original Oscan Pāli Paris participle Pennsylvania perfect Phil Philadelphia Philology phonetic prepositions present preterit probably Professor Jespersen pronoun reviewer ROLAND G Romance Langs root Sanskrit Sapir SC Prof seems singular Sommer and Ehelolf sound-change speech stem strong nouns suffix syllable texts tion twelfth century Univ University verb vowel Vulgar Latin Walde weak nouns Yale York City Zeitschrift
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 97 - ... would you think it? — she called me dear, and sweeting, and honey, just as if we were married: by the living jingo, I had a month's mind to buss her. Jessamy. Well, but how did it end? Jonathan. Why, as I was standing talking with her, a parcel of sailor men and boys got round me, the snarl-headed curs fell a-kicking and cursing of me at such a tarnal rate, that I vow I was glad to take to my heels and split home, right off, tail on end, like a stream of chalk.
Seite 88 - Je le dirai si je le vois," but not with yuand : " quand je le verrai." (2) Volition. Both E. will and Dan. vil to a certain degree retain traces of the original meaning of real volition, and therefore E. will go cannot be given as a pure
Seite 68 - MODERN PHILOLOGY A Journal devoted to research in Modern Languages and Literatures...
Seite 189 - Pacanos Deus omnipotes tal serbitjo fere ke denante ela sua face gaudioso segamus.
Seite 65 - Section 1. Officers: The officers shall be a President, a Vice-President, a Secretary, and a Treasurer, who shall be elected annually by the members of the Society.
Seite 299 - No. 1. $1.00. , editor (1929): Codex AM 619 Quarto. Old Norwegian Book of Homilies Containing The Miracles of Saint Olaf and Alcuin's De Virtutibus et Vitiis. Vol. 14, No. 4. $2.00. , editor (1937): The Old Norwegian General Law of the Gulathing According to Codex Gl.kS 1154 Folio.
Seite 25 - Il nome di bubbola è' stato dato a questo uccello a cagione del grido che manda in primavera. Stando nascosto dentro gli alberi, continuamente ripete bu, bu, bu, bu, bu, con voce sonora e forte, di modo che ne risuona la campagna anche a distanza assai grande : ma egli canta solo nel tempo degli amori. In aprile arrivano le bubbole dai paesi meridionali oltremarini, dove han passato l'inverno; e di qui partono nel settembre per ritornarvi. Vivono...
Seite 30 - Et li cris lieve et la noise, et li cevalier et li serjant s'arment et qeurent as portes et as murs por le castel desfendre, et li borgois montent as aleoirs des murs si jetent quariax et peus aguisiés.
Seite 88 - Many languages have no future tense proper or have even given up.forms which they had once and replaced them by circuitous substitutes. I shall here give a survey of the principal ways in which languages have come to possess expressions for future time. '(1) The present tense is used in a future sense. This is particularly easy when the sentence contains a precise indication of time in the form of a subjunct and when the distance in time from the present moment is not very great...