The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1871 - 599 pagine |
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Pagina 24
... fact the permanent memorial is the name and works of Bæda , who expired not long before the greatness of his people . While Can- terbury was the nominal metropolis of Christianity , the kingdom of Northumbria was its powerful seat . It ...
... fact the permanent memorial is the name and works of Bæda , who expired not long before the greatness of his people . While Can- terbury was the nominal metropolis of Christianity , the kingdom of Northumbria was its powerful seat . It ...
Pagina 28
... fact the genuine Anglian , should have received the Keltic name of Scotch ' from the Gaelic dynasty which mounted the Anglian throne , and that in taking its modern name from its northern neighbours it should have furnished a parallel ...
... fact the genuine Anglian , should have received the Keltic name of Scotch ' from the Gaelic dynasty which mounted the Anglian throne , and that in taking its modern name from its northern neighbours it should have furnished a parallel ...
Pagina 29
... fact is that Wessex inherited a cultivated language from the north , and that when they called their translations Englisc and not Seaxisc , they acknowledged that debt . The cultivated Anglian dialect became the literary medium of ...
... fact is that Wessex inherited a cultivated language from the north , and that when they called their translations Englisc and not Seaxisc , they acknowledged that debt . The cultivated Anglian dialect became the literary medium of ...
Pagina 40
... fact , the capability to which the language had arrived would alone be sufficient to assure us that it must have been diligently and largely cultivated . To this pitch of development it had reached , first by inheriting the relics of ...
... fact , the capability to which the language had arrived would alone be sufficient to assure us that it must have been diligently and largely cultivated . To this pitch of development it had reached , first by inheriting the relics of ...
Pagina 43
... fact any more than in word , been entirely broken , but survived , in due time to assert itself anew . - ' And yet , while the statelier superstructure of the language , almost all articles of luxury , all having to do with the chase ...
... fact any more than in word , been entirely broken , but survived , in due time to assert itself anew . - ' And yet , while the statelier superstructure of the language , almost all articles of luxury , all having to do with the chase ...
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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