The Tongues of Italy: Prehistory and HistoryHarvard University Press, 1958 - 465 pagine Through the centuries, Italy has received many cultures from lands around the Mediterranean and beyond the Alps, which either superseded prevailing Italian cultures or were absorbed by them. But the result is always a mixture. The linguistic evolution of Italy parallels this development, and presented as part of the cultural history it beomes a colorful and exciting tale.--dust jacket. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 88
Pagina 201
... evidence we have is mainly toponymic . ( But the suffix ―asca , so often claimed as the pre - Indo - European Leitfossil of the area , could be also Indo - European . ) Otherwise our evidence is 11 ( das eigentliche ligurisch ) is ...
... evidence we have is mainly toponymic . ( But the suffix ―asca , so often claimed as the pre - Indo - European Leitfossil of the area , could be also Indo - European . ) Otherwise our evidence is 11 ( das eigentliche ligurisch ) is ...
Pagina 202
... evidence of mixture of Italic and Keltic in Ligurian.12 To all this I should make only one correction , pertaining to answer ( 4 ) . I take my usual stand , namely , that we have no evidence for assuming the migration of a people ...
... evidence of mixture of Italic and Keltic in Ligurian.12 To all this I should make only one correction , pertaining to answer ( 4 ) . I take my usual stand , namely , that we have no evidence for assuming the migration of a people ...
Pagina 220
... evidence , they cannot be proved to be the physical descendants of older population strata , the material evidence makes it imperative to separate them clearly from other Iron Ages peoples of Italy , both cremating and inhuming . The ...
... evidence , they cannot be proved to be the physical descendants of older population strata , the material evidence makes it imperative to separate them clearly from other Iron Ages peoples of Italy , both cremating and inhuming . The ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
according ancient appearance became become beginning called century CHAPTER civilization Classical common concerning continued course cultural dialects early east emperor Empire especially ethnic Etruscan Europe European eventually evidence example existence fact foreign Germanic Greek hand Hence human Illyrian important Indo-European influence inhabitants inscriptions invaders Iron Age Italian Italic Italy land Langobards language later Latin Latium learned least less Ligurian linguistic matter means Mediterranean migration native neolithic northern once origin period persons Plautus political pope population possibly prehistoric Proto-Indo-European question race racial reason records region remained result Roman Rome scholars seems Senate sense Sicily social southern speak speakers speech spoken spread term theory tion tribes true Umbrian United various Villanovan Whatmough whole writing written