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Our evidence consists not only of isolated vocables , but of words used in contexts and in explicit statements that reveal the attitude of the speakers of Sanskrit to their language in theory , which can hardly have been without ...
Our evidence consists not only of isolated vocables , but of words used in contexts and in explicit statements that reveal the attitude of the speakers of Sanskrit to their language in theory , which can hardly have been without ...
Seite 440
We are left with an ever growing number of words in Sanskrit , not negligible even in the oldest stage of the language , that cannot be explained as formed within historic or prehistoric Aryan Indic from its own resources , nor as ...
We are left with an ever growing number of words in Sanskrit , not negligible even in the oldest stage of the language , that cannot be explained as formed within historic or prehistoric Aryan Indic from its own resources , nor as ...
Seite 450
into the Sanskrit vocabulary , as well as hyper - Sanskritisms formed from Middle Indic words , ( 3 ) words borrowed from the Dravidian and the Munda languages , and ( again concisely ) ( 4 ) words borrowed from Iranian , Semitic , and ...
into the Sanskrit vocabulary , as well as hyper - Sanskritisms formed from Middle Indic words , ( 3 ) words borrowed from the Dravidian and the Munda languages , and ( again concisely ) ( 4 ) words borrowed from Iranian , Semitic , and ...
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Inhalt
I | 1 |
Problems in Armenian phonology II | 9 |
Friess group D | 25 |
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allophones American analysis appear Associate assume beginning called chapter clusters College common comparative consider consonant contrast culture definition described detail dialects discussion distinction distribution English evidence example expression fact final formal forms French further German give given grammar Greek important indicate initial Institute interest interpretation Italy juncture language Latin learning least Library linguistic material meaning method Michigan morpheme names nature object occur original pattern person Ph.D phonemes position possible present probably problem Professor question reason reference relation represent reviewer Sanskrit seems semantic sentence sequence similar sound speech spelling statement stem structure successors suffix suggests syllable symbols theory tion units University utterance verbs vowel words writing