Language, Band 3George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1927 |
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Ergebnisse 6-10 von 22
Seite 235
... grammatical forms of his speech , the proportion of forms with and without n in his transcription would tend to be approxi- mately the same in the different grammatical categories and the varia- tion in proportions would be the result ...
... grammatical forms of his speech , the proportion of forms with and without n in his transcription would tend to be approxi- mately the same in the different grammatical categories and the varia- tion in proportions would be the result ...
Seite 237
... grammatical categories used are the singular of weak nouns , the weak adjective , the dative singular and dative ... grammatical category into the number of forms of that category that had no final n . E.g. , text 1 has 122 examples of ...
... grammatical categories used are the singular of weak nouns , the weak adjective , the dative singular and dative ... grammatical category into the number of forms of that category that had no final n . E.g. , text 1 has 122 examples of ...
Seite 238
... grammatical categories as those I had obtained from the first count , but that for both texts the percentages obtained for the strong and weak adjective in the second count were a little smaller ( between .01 and .04 ) than those ...
... grammatical categories as those I had obtained from the first count , but that for both texts the percentages obtained for the strong and weak adjective in the second count were a little smaller ( between .01 and .04 ) than those ...
Seite 239
... grammatical category in the different texts or for the three grammatical categories in the indi- vidual texts , but when we examine the total percentage of loss of n for the three grammatical categories in all the texts taken together ...
... grammatical category in the different texts or for the three grammatical categories in the indi- vidual texts , but when we examine the total percentage of loss of n for the three grammatical categories in all the texts taken together ...
Seite 240
... grammatical categories , the quantitative relations are similar to those that appear in part C. In every text but one the percentage of loss for the last two grammatical categories is substantially less and in most texts very much less ...
... grammatical categories , the quantitative relations are similar to those that appear in part C. In every text but one the percentage of loss for the last two grammatical categories is substantially less and in most texts very much less ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American aorist Association bheu Bloomfield BoSt Brugmann Castilian Chicago College consonants darn dative dative plural derived dialects eleventh century ending etymology examples Executive Committee explained fact FM Prof Friedrich future GEORGE MELVILLE BOLLING German Götze grammatical categories Grammatik Greek Grundriss hi-conjugation Hittite Hrozný imperfect Indo-European inflection initial h inscription Italic Kent Krapp Latin Leonard Bloomfield Library Linguistic Society loss of final meaning Meillet Menéndez Pidal Messapic Middle English Modern Muller Ohio State University Old English original Oscan Paris participle Pennsylvania perfect person Philadelphia Philology phonetic present preterit probably Professor pronunciation ROLAND G Romance Langs Sanskrit SC Prof singular of weak Society of America Sommer and Ehelolf Spanish speech stem strong nouns subjunctive suffix syllable tense texts thematic third pl tion twelfth century Univ verb vowel Vulgar Latin Walde weak adjective weak nouns Whatmough word Yale York City