Compounds of the Word "horse,": A Study in SemanticsUniversity of Pennsylvania, 1919 - 83 Seiten |
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Anglo-Saxon appositive aśva aśvarodhaka Asvins Avestan bahuvrihi cavalry cognate contains a verbal Copulative denote dissertation drawn by horses English Dictionary equiria excellent horse extant literature final member found in extant German Greek groom group of words haplology Hippocastanaceae hippoglossinae hippology hippophagist hippotraginae hippotragus horse carried horse dealer horse excellent thing horse infesting horse standing place horse-box horse-course horse-dealer horse-eye horse-fly horse-hair horse-heal horse-match horse-monger horse-pick horse-post horse-power horse-race horse-rider horse-shoe horse-soldiers horse's tail horseback horseman Hypotactic initial member languages large or coarse Latin listed literal meaning meaning large NAMES OF ANIMALS names of plants Nerium odorum noun stem number of words object Old Persian omitted middle member Paratactic Pferdeschwanz Pferdestärke plant horse-bane plant Physalis flexuosa Post-Vedic proper name Purpose class Quality class respect to horses Sanskrit semantic relation Smyrnium stable for horses substantive suffix Triosteum perfoliatum Tussilago farfara Vedic verb verbal idea Viola canina word horse Words found
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Seite 9 - Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language. Based on the International Dictionary of 1890 and 1900. Now completely revised in all departments; including also a Dictionary of Geography and Biography; being the latest authentic quarto edition of the Merriam Series.
Seite 3 - ... advocates of Latin and Greek. In The Value of the Classics (Princeton, 1917), edited by Professor Andrew F. West, numerous testimonials as to the helpfulness of the classics in mastering other subjects are given by men in almost all fields of human endeavor. In his Language and Philology (Boston, 1923) , Dr. Roland G. Kent, Professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Pennsylvania, has strikingly shown the tremendous debt of English to the classical languages, especially to Latin....
Seite 23 - Arcadian plant of which horses are madly fond or which makes them mad; a small black, fleshy substance on the forehead of a new-born foal, which was held to be a powerful love charm.
Seite 13 - In the second place, classification by case relation sometimes separates iflentical semantic relations. Eng. horse-rider is called an instance of genitive relation because both members are nouns; Eng.