The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1880 - 700 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 85
Pagina iv
... whole will be deferred until such time as the learner shall have reached them severally by means of facts which lie within his own expe- rience . It is upon this , which may be called the Elementary method , that the present manual has ...
... whole will be deferred until such time as the learner shall have reached them severally by means of facts which lie within his own expe- rience . It is upon this , which may be called the Elementary method , that the present manual has ...
Pagina vi
... whole , and that as a whole it is commended to the student's attention ; -because an adequate notion of the English language is not to be acquired from this or that interesting particular , nor from any number of such ; but only from a ...
... whole , and that as a whole it is commended to the student's attention ; -because an adequate notion of the English language is not to be acquired from this or that interesting particular , nor from any number of such ; but only from a ...
Pagina 17
... whole extent of our insular history , which they would divide into Old English , Middle English , and New English . But on the whole , the terms already in use seem bolder , and more distinct . They enable us to distinguish between ...
... whole extent of our insular history , which they would divide into Old English , Middle English , and New English . But on the whole , the terms already in use seem bolder , and more distinct . They enable us to distinguish between ...
Pagina 18
John Earle. dominant power , it is not very irregular to call the whole nation briefly SAXON . § 2. Domestic relations . 18. We have no contemporary account of the Saxon colonisation . The story which Bæda gives us in the eighth century ...
John Earle. dominant power , it is not very irregular to call the whole nation briefly SAXON . § 2. Domestic relations . 18. We have no contemporary account of the Saxon colonisation . The story which Bæda gives us in the eighth century ...
Pagina 22
... whole community . On this view , which re- ceives support also from the number of Latin words in Welsh , the arrival of the Saxons prevented this island from becoming the home of a Romanesque people like the French or Spanish . 22. The ...
... whole community . On this view , which re- ceives support also from the number of Latin words in Welsh , the arrival of the Saxons prevented this island from becoming the home of a Romanesque people like the French or Spanish . 22. The ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
accent adjectival adjective adverb alphabet ancient Anglo-Saxon become BISHOP called Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer cloth compound conjunction consonant Danish dialect distinction English language example expression Extra fcap Faery Queene familiar flexion following quotation French words function German Gothic Gothic languages grammar 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 philology phonetic phrasal phrase plural poet poetry prefix preposition present preterite pronoun pronunciation reader relics rhyme rhythm Romanesque Saxon Second Edition seems sense sentence Shakspeare shew signifies singular sort sound speak speech spelling Spenser substantival substantive syllable symbolic words syntax termination thing thou tion traces translated verb vowel W. W. Skeat writing written þat