The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1871 - 599 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 92
Pagina 4
... example , which begin with a thin consonant in Greek or Latin or both , and the same word is found in English or its cognate dialects beginning with an aspirate . Thus if the Latin or Greek word begins with P the English word begins ...
... example , which begin with a thin consonant in Greek or Latin or both , and the same word is found in English or its cognate dialects beginning with an aspirate . Thus if the Latin or Greek word begins with P the English word begins ...
Pagina 5
... examples which lie outside the above analogy . But this will not injure the proof resulting from those examples , unless it can be supposed that those are mere accidental resem- blances arbitrarily collected . Against such an idea is to ...
... examples which lie outside the above analogy . But this will not injure the proof resulting from those examples , unless it can be supposed that those are mere accidental resem- blances arbitrarily collected . Against such an idea is to ...
Pagina 10
... example of { * } mut , mood . To the same effect is the following list , in which the Old High Dutch is compared ... examples are all drawn from one set of consonants , the tooth - consonants or dentals , and it is in this class of con ...
... example of { * } mut , mood . To the same effect is the following list , in which the Old High Dutch is compared ... examples are all drawn from one set of consonants , the tooth - consonants or dentals , and it is in this class of con ...
Pagina 24
... example of a Christian nation in Saxondom . Intimately connected with this , if not absolutely rising out of it , is the supremacy of position and influence which the northern kingdom enjoyed in this island for a hundred and thirty ...
... example of a Christian nation in Saxondom . Intimately connected with this , if not absolutely rising out of it , is the supremacy of position and influence which the northern kingdom enjoyed in this island for a hundred and thirty ...
Pagina 25
... example , to read her books , to form their language after hers , and to call it ENGLISC . They first produced a cultivated book- speech , and they had the natural reward of inventors and pioneers , that of setting a name to their ...
... example , to read her books , to form their language after hers , and to call it ENGLISC . They first produced a cultivated book- speech , and they had the natural reward of inventors and pioneers , that of setting a name to their ...
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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