Language, Band 30 -Band 31,Ausgabe 4,Teil 3George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1955 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 73
Seite 461
... dialects , we need to have a grasp of their earliest ascertainable geographical relationships as well as of the chronological relationships of our data . Although considerable material on Indo - European dialect geography has been ...
... dialects , we need to have a grasp of their earliest ascertainable geographical relationships as well as of the chronological relationships of our data . Although considerable material on Indo - European dialect geography has been ...
Seite 462
... dialects , or at ascer- taining that such dialects as Indo - Iranian and Slavic were spoken in contiguous areas , or even at stating that pre - Indo - Iranian and pre - Slavic were spoken in contiguous areas . The only conclusion that ...
... dialects , or at ascer- taining that such dialects as Indo - Iranian and Slavic were spoken in contiguous areas , or even at stating that pre - Indo - Iranian and pre - Slavic were spoken in contiguous areas . The only conclusion that ...
Seite 562
... dialects . To attribute the coalescence of t and d with t and d to the Coptic substratum ( 54 ) is clearly not justified . This change occurred also in areas where Coptic was not spoken , and even in areas where the language previously ...
... dialects . To attribute the coalescence of t and d with t and d to the Coptic substratum ( 54 ) is clearly not justified . This change occurred also in areas where Coptic was not spoken , and even in areas where the language previously ...
Inhalt
I | 3 |
Lépoque réaliste I JUILLAND | 313 |
PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED | 339 |
Urheberrecht | |
8 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American analysis appears aspect Associate assume called chapter cited clauses College common comparative complete consonant contrast corresponding course derived dialects discussion distinction English evidence example existence explained expression fact final forms French function further future German give given grammar Greek historical imperfect important included indicative initial instance interest interpretation language later Latin Library linguistic listed material meaning Michigan morphemes names noun occurs original past pattern perfective person Ph.D phonemic phrase position possible present probably problems Professor Proto-Indo-European question reference relation represents result seems sound speech spirant statement stop stress structure subjunctive suffix suggests syllable tense theory tion University verb voiced vowel