The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1880 - 700 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 67
Pagina iii
... true and natural place assigned to it , according to the order , relation , and proportion dictated by the nature of language . What the nature of language is , can be ascertained only by a wide com- parison of languages taken at ...
... true and natural place assigned to it , according to the order , relation , and proportion dictated by the nature of language . What the nature of language is , can be ascertained only by a wide com- parison of languages taken at ...
Pagina 10
... true guide , will substantially hold good also here . The consonantal variations between the High Dutch on the one hand , and the Low Dutch on the other , may be symbolised by writing the German word samt over the English word tame ...
... true guide , will substantially hold good also here . The consonantal variations between the High Dutch on the one hand , and the Low Dutch on the other , may be symbolised by writing the German word samt over the English word tame ...
Pagina 42
... true continuity of the nation had not , in fact any more than in word , been entirely broken , but survived , in due time to assert itself anew . And yet , while the statelier superstructure of the language , almost all articles of ...
... true continuity of the nation had not , in fact any more than in word , been entirely broken , but survived , in due time to assert itself anew . And yet , while the statelier superstructure of the language , almost all articles of ...
Pagina 53
... true monk , carries his regularity into everything - arrangement , metre , orthography . He is an English - speaking Dane , but educated in a monas- tery that has already been ruled by a succession of French abbots . From these two ...
... true monk , carries his regularity into everything - arrangement , metre , orthography . He is an English - speaking Dane , but educated in a monas- tery that has already been ruled by a succession of French abbots . From these two ...
Pagina 78
... true natives . In Chaucer the verb banish takes the Saxon prefix y- and suffix -ed : - And Brutus hath by hire chaste bloode yswore , That Tarquyn shuld ybanyshed be therefore . Legende of Goode Women . The difference of look between ...
... true natives . In Chaucer the verb banish takes the Saxon prefix y- and suffix -ed : - And Brutus hath by hire chaste bloode yswore , That Tarquyn shuld ybanyshed be therefore . Legende of Goode Women . The difference of look between ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
accent adjectival adjective adverb alphabet ancient Anglo-Saxon become Bible called Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer cloth compound conjunction consonant Danish dialect distinction Edition English language example expression Extra fcap fact Faery Queene familiar flexion following quotation French words function German Gothic Gothic languages grammatical Greek guttural habit haue Hebrew High Dutch illustration infinitive inflections instances interjection Italian John John Keble King Latin Layamon letter literature Lord means mind modern Mosogothic native nature noun observe old Saxon original Ormulum orthography participle person philological philology phonetic phrasal phrase plural poet poetry prefix preposition present preterite pronoun pronunciation relics rendered rhyme rhythm Romanesque Saxon seems sense sentence Shakspeare shew signifies singular sort sound speak speech spelling Spenser substantival substantive syllable symbolic words syntax termination thing thou tion traces translation verb vowel W. W. Skeat writing written þat