Studies in the History of the English LanguageWinter, 1990 - 225 Seiten |
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Seite 46
... educated people more often offended against good style than their counterparts in England would ( see Mathews 1931 : 16 ) . In the 18th century up to independence the situation was as follows : 1 ) America lacked a single centre of ...
... educated people more often offended against good style than their counterparts in England would ( see Mathews 1931 : 16 ) . In the 18th century up to independence the situation was as follows : 1 ) America lacked a single centre of ...
Seite 73
... educated use , and we do indeed find 13th - century complaints about incorrect use in insular French ( so - called Malmesbury French ) , and later increasingly about the less prestigious variety of Norman French ( vis - à - vis Parisian ...
... educated use , and we do indeed find 13th - century complaints about incorrect use in insular French ( so - called Malmesbury French ) , and later increasingly about the less prestigious variety of Norman French ( vis - à - vis Parisian ...
Seite 99
... educated ' speech must have been enormous in the 16th century , the fact that no grammars or diction- aries were available for guidance produced widespread uncertainty . There are early statements to the effect that the educated speech ...
... educated ' speech must have been enormous in the 16th century , the fact that no grammars or diction- aries were available for guidance produced widespread uncertainty . There are early statements to the effect that the educated speech ...
Inhalt
Foreword 7 | 7 |
Middle English a creole? 1986 6578 | 65 |
Chaucers English What remains to be done 1978 7994 | 79 |
Urheberrecht | |
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18th century Afrikaans anglicization appears Bible Chaucer's claim colloquial compiler contemporary context contrast corpora corpus creole languages cultural Danelaw dialect Dictionary discussion early edition educated EModE England English language especially exist fact factors French functions German Görlach grammar guage homogeneous illustrate individual inflections influence Latin lexemes lexical lexis lish literature London Max und Moritz medieval Middle English Modern English national language non-standard norm northern onwards original orthography period phonology pidgin pidgin and creole poetry poets polysemy possible prestige problems pronunciation prose regarded regional remained repr restricted rhyme Scandinavian Scotland Scots Scots language Scottish selection social sociolects sociolinguistic speakers speech spelling spoken standard language structures style stylistic surviving syntactic syntax text types tion Tok Pisin tradition translation usage verb vocabulary word-formation words writing written language