The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1871 - 599 pagine |
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Risultati 1-5 di 95
Pagina 8
... French habit of getting a sort of a passive by prefixing the reflective pronoun se . Thus in French marier is to marry ( active ) , of parents who marry their children ; but if you have to express to marry in the sense of to get married ...
... French habit of getting a sort of a passive by prefixing the reflective pronoun se . Thus in French marier is to marry ( active ) , of parents who marry their children ; but if you have to express to marry in the sense of to get married ...
Pagina 23
... French Brittany . The great and fundamental question is : - How far the British population at large was Romanised ? Some think that habits of speaking Latin were almost universal , and for this they refer to the rude inscribed stones of ...
... French Brittany . The great and fundamental question is : - How far the British population at large was Romanised ? Some think that habits of speaking Latin were almost universal , and for this they refer to the rude inscribed stones of ...
Pagina 36
... French Exercises comes to the sentence ' Can you swim ?? he is directed to render it into French by Savez vous nager ? ' that is , ' Know you to swim ? ' The very same idea is ( philologically ) at the bottom of ' Can 36 SKETCH OF THE RISE.
... French Exercises comes to the sentence ' Can you swim ?? he is directed to render it into French by Savez vous nager ? ' that is , ' Know you to swim ? ' The very same idea is ( philologically ) at the bottom of ' Can 36 SKETCH OF THE RISE.
Pagina 42
... French , and this foreign language they brought with them to England . Sometimes this language is spoken of as the Norman or Norman - French . In a well - known volume of lectures on the Study of Words , published seventeen years ago by ...
... French , and this foreign language they brought with them to England . Sometimes this language is spoken of as the Norman or Norman - French . In a well - known volume of lectures on the Study of Words , published seventeen years ago by ...
Pagina 45
... French was getting more and more widely known and spoken ; and it never covered so wide an area in this island as it did at the moment when the native speech upreared her head again . to assert a permanent supremacy . As the waters of a ...
... French was getting more and more widely known and spoken ; and it never covered so wide an area in this island as it did at the moment when the native speech upreared her head again . to assert a permanent supremacy . As the waters of a ...
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accent adjectival adjective adverb Alfred Tennyson alliteration ancient Anglo-Saxon appears Ballad Society become belongs called century character Chaucer collocation compound conjunction consonant dialect distinction Dutch elder emphasis English language example expression fact Faerie Queene familiar flexion following quotation French words German Gothic Gothic languages grammatical Greek guage habit Hebrew Henry VI illustration infinitive inflections instances interjection King Latin Layamon letter literature means metre mind modern English native nature noun observed onomatopoetic original Ormulum orthography participle person philological phrasal phrase plural poet poetry preposition present preterite pronominal pronoun pronunciation Randle Cotgrave reader retained rhyme rhythm Saxon seems sense sentence Shakspeare signifies sort sound speak speech spelling Spenser substantive syllable symbol-verb symbolic words syntax thing thou tion tone traces translation verb verbal vowel William Cowper William Wordsworth writing written þæt þat