The Knowledge of EnglishH. Holt, 1927 - 572 Seiten |
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Seite 21
George Philip Krapp. dialect may seem to another person normal and properly to be regarded as standard . When a ... DIALECTS DIALECTS in at least one respect are ENGLISH TODAY 21.
George Philip Krapp. dialect may seem to another person normal and properly to be regarded as standard . When a ... DIALECTS DIALECTS in at least one respect are ENGLISH TODAY 21.
Seite 22
George Philip Krapp. III ENGLISH DIALECTS DIALECTS in at least one respect are like apples . An apple is a known kind ... dialect . " The speech of a locality or of a particular level of society is classed as a dialect by contrast with a ...
George Philip Krapp. III ENGLISH DIALECTS DIALECTS in at least one respect are like apples . An apple is a known kind ... dialect . " The speech of a locality or of a particular level of society is classed as a dialect by contrast with a ...
Seite 23
... dialects there are in the English language . The first preliminary to answering this question would be to define the term " dialect , " but by the time a definition had been reached , it would have become apparent that no answer to the ...
... dialects there are in the English language . The first preliminary to answering this question would be to define the term " dialect , " but by the time a definition had been reached , it would have become apparent that no answer to the ...
Seite 24
... dialect as the most precise stickler for grammatical propriety . They both speak English even the most ungrammatical person's English is English . To include the two within the same dialect calls for some stretching of the area of ...
... dialect as the most precise stickler for grammatical propriety . They both speak English even the most ungrammatical person's English is English . To include the two within the same dialect calls for some stretching of the area of ...
Seite 25
... rather than deep . A dialect may be defined , therefore , as a group of simi- lars in language conveniently held together as a unity by the process of disregarding the dissimilar elements also present in ENGLISH DIALECTS 25.
... rather than deep . A dialect may be defined , therefore , as a group of simi- lars in language conveniently held together as a unity by the process of disregarding the dissimilar elements also present in ENGLISH DIALECTS 25.
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accepted acquired adjective Anglo-Saxon appear authority become beginning called carried century character common completely concerned correctness cultivated definition determined dialect dictionary direct distinction elements English language example existence experience expression fact familiar feeling follow formal forms French gender Germanic give grammar habits human important indicated individual Indo-European inflectional intelligible interest kind knowledge Latin learned less limits linguistic literary literature living logical matter meaning merely mind Modern English nature never noun object observation origin past perhaps period person phrase plural poetry popular possessive possible practical present pronounced pronunciation prose question reason regarded regular relation remain respect result rules seems sense sentence simple social sounds speak speaker speech spelling structure student style term things thought tion traditional verb vocabulary vowel whole words writing