Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 50
Seite 371
Hall repeatedly opposes the neolinguistic - geographic to the neogrammatical - comparative method.30 While he strongly criticizes the former , he attempts no analysis of the latter , which he simply takes for granted .
Hall repeatedly opposes the neolinguistic - geographic to the neogrammatical - comparative method.30 While he strongly criticizes the former , he attempts no analysis of the latter , which he simply takes for granted .
Seite 377
It is , however , important to state briefly what our comparative method is , and its sharp contrast to linguistic geography . As long as speakers of cognate dialects remain in contact , all sorts of linguistic features tend to spread ...
It is , however , important to state briefly what our comparative method is , and its sharp contrast to linguistic geography . As long as speakers of cognate dialects remain in contact , all sorts of linguistic features tend to spread ...
Seite 13
Historical comparative linguistics was represented by courses in Indo - European Comparative Grammar , Old Church Slavonic , and Finno - Ugric . Sanskrit , which was given in 1945 and omitted from the program for 1946 as first outlined ...
Historical comparative linguistics was represented by courses in Indo - European Comparative Grammar , Old Church Slavonic , and Finno - Ugric . Sanskrit , which was given in 1945 and omitted from the program for 1946 as first outlined ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
Personal Pronouns in Reflexive Situations | 23 |
The Phonemic Split of Germanic k in Old English | 34 |
NonInitial k in the North of England | 43 |
9 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
affix alternant American analysis appears assume base beginning belongs Bois called College common comparative complete consider consonant constituent construction contains contour contrast dialect diphthongs discussion distinction element England English evidence example fact final forms further Germanic give given grammar Greek Hall hand Hittite indicate Indo-European initial Institute Italy king language laryngeal later Latin Library linguistic meaning Michigan morpheme morphs names noted noun occur original pattern perhaps person Ph.D phonemic position possible preceding prefix present probably problem Professor pronoun publication result root seems sentence sequence single Society sound speech stem stop stress suffix syllable tion tone unit University utterance verb voiced vowel words York zero