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the centuries, Italy has received many cultures from lands around the Mediterranean and beyond the Alps, which either superseded prevailing Italian cultures or were absorbed by them.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 70
Pagina 59
... speakers of a greater number of Italian dialects than another living dialect would have been , as a sort of lingua franca , and that it was therefore singled out . Indeed it seems to me that the two claims are incom- patible : the ...
... speakers of a greater number of Italian dialects than another living dialect would have been , as a sort of lingua franca , and that it was therefore singled out . Indeed it seems to me that the two claims are incom- patible : the ...
Pagina 153
... speakers of Romanic languages are often referred to as Latins or Latin races . Hence it is difficult to account for the respectability which analogous theories regard- ing Proto - Indo - European and Indo - European still enjoy in some ...
... speakers of Romanic languages are often referred to as Latins or Latin races . Hence it is difficult to account for the respectability which analogous theories regard- ing Proto - Indo - European and Indo - European still enjoy in some ...
Pagina 155
... speakers of Proto - Indo - European , what caused the apparently minor movement which loosened a chain reaction in linguistic , though not ethnic respect , a Sprachen- wanderung , as it were , though not a Völkerwanderung . Given the ...
... speakers of Proto - Indo - European , what caused the apparently minor movement which loosened a chain reaction in linguistic , though not ethnic respect , a Sprachen- wanderung , as it were , though not a Völkerwanderung . Given the ...
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