The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1871 - 599 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 39
Pagina 1
... altered forms in different members of the same family of languages , the diversity of form is found to have a regular method and analogy . Such an analogy has been established between the varying consonants which B hold analogous ...
... altered forms in different members of the same family of languages , the diversity of form is found to have a regular method and analogy . Such an analogy has been established between the varying consonants which B hold analogous ...
Pagina 34
... alteration has taken place . spells in old Saxon as in modern English , but yet it has altered in grammatical habit , in application , and in con- vertible use . In grammatical habit it has altered ; for in Saxon it had a genitive ...
... alteration has taken place . spells in old Saxon as in modern English , but yet it has altered in grammatical habit , in application , and in con- vertible use . In grammatical habit it has altered ; for in Saxon it had a genitive ...
Pagina 35
... altered in its spelling , and which is yet seen to have under- gone alterations of another kind . The other instances shall be more lightly touched on . Word , has altered grammatically ; for in Saxon it stood unvaried in the plural ...
... altered in its spelling , and which is yet seen to have under- gone alterations of another kind . The other instances shall be more lightly touched on . Word , has altered grammatically ; for in Saxon it stood unvaried in the plural ...
Pagina 38
... alteration be only superficial . But when changes take place in them , we feel that the phase of the language is affected . The change which has taken place in the preposition WITH is more than the going or coming of many long words ...
... alteration be only superficial . But when changes take place in them , we feel that the phase of the language is affected . The change which has taken place in the preposition WITH is more than the going or coming of many long words ...
Pagina 45
... alter this fact . What the Conquest did was to destroy the cultivated Englisc , which depended for its propagation upon literature and literary men . This once extinct , there was no central or standard language . The French language in ...
... alter this fact . What the Conquest did was to destroy the cultivated Englisc , which depended for its propagation upon literature and literary men . This once extinct , there was no central or standard language . The French language in ...
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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