Language, Band 35George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1959 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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Seite 35
... example , if we are shown a prized work of art and exclaim Beautiful !, the speed and energy of the response will not be lost on the owner . ' It does not appear totally obvious that in this case the way to impress the owner is to ...
... example , if we are shown a prized work of art and exclaim Beautiful !, the speed and energy of the response will not be lost on the owner . ' It does not appear totally obvious that in this case the way to impress the owner is to ...
Seite 479
... example , we can compare only the initial morphs of Sanskrit ákṣi and Latin oculus ' eye ' . But while it is often possible in the comparative method to compare whole words that are cognate , for example Skt . ásti with Lat . est ' ( he ...
... example , we can compare only the initial morphs of Sanskrit ákṣi and Latin oculus ' eye ' . But while it is often possible in the comparative method to compare whole words that are cognate , for example Skt . ásti with Lat . est ' ( he ...
Seite 537
... example take- belongs to the latter but not the former . This is the fourth example of Greenberg's misuse of the term ' restricted class ' . A ' restricted class containing all present stems ' in English is in contradiction with the ...
... example take- belongs to the latter but not the former . This is the fourth example of Greenberg's misuse of the term ' restricted class ' . A ' restricted class containing all present stems ' in English is in contradiction with the ...
Inhalt
The IndoEuropean semivowels in BaltoSlavic | 16 |
Yet again the Strassburg Oaths | 24 |
Notes | 126 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation analysis appears Associate behavior beside called common comparative consider consonant contains contrast correspondences course definition derived dialects discussion distinction distribution English evidence example explain expression fact final formations forms frequency function Germanic given grammar High historical important indicative instance interest involved kind language later Latin learning least less linguistic meaning Michigan morpheme names noun object occur original pattern person Ph.D phonemic position possible present probably problem Professor Proto-Indo-European question reason reconstruction reference regard represent response result root seems semantic sentence sequence short similar single sound speakers speech statement stem stop stress structure subjunctive suffix suggests syllable Table theory tion unit University verb vowel words