The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1880 - 700 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 6-10 di 62
Pagina 82
... sentence sergeant superfluity vouchsafe supper 76. These words are still in our language ; and beyond these there are many French words in Chaucer which have since been disused , or so much altered as to 82 THE RISE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ...
... sentence sergeant superfluity vouchsafe supper 76. These words are still in our language ; and beyond these there are many French words in Chaucer which have since been disused , or so much altered as to 82 THE RISE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ...
Pagina 179
... sentences . A strictly phonetic spelling - reform requires that we should have a separate character for every separate sound , and that no character should ever stand for any but its own particular sound . One such system has acquired ...
... sentences . A strictly phonetic spelling - reform requires that we should have a separate character for every separate sound , and that no character should ever stand for any but its own particular sound . One such system has acquired ...
Pagina 186
... sentence to expound , and it may be regarded as the rudiment of such a sentence . But it is a confusion of thought to rank it among the parts of speech . It is not in any sense a part ; it is a whole ( though an indistinct ) expression ...
... sentence to expound , and it may be regarded as the rudiment of such a sentence . But it is a confusion of thought to rank it among the parts of speech . It is not in any sense a part ; it is a whole ( though an indistinct ) expression ...
Pagina 187
... sentence , or by virtue of this obscure verbal character , it may be connected with it by a preposition , as- Oh for a humbler heart and prouder song ! This is the nearest approach which it makes to structural relations with the ...
... sentence , or by virtue of this obscure verbal character , it may be connected with it by a preposition , as- Oh for a humbler heart and prouder song ! This is the nearest approach which it makes to structural relations with the ...
Pagina 188
John Earle. relations with the sentence , and this sort of relation it can have with a noun or pronoun , as— They gaped upon me with their mouths , and said : Fie on thee , fie on thee , we saw it with our eyes . - Psalm xxxv . 21 . From ...
John Earle. relations with the sentence , and this sort of relation it can have with a noun or pronoun , as— They gaped upon me with their mouths , and said : Fie on thee , fie on thee , we saw it with our eyes . - Psalm xxxv . 21 . From ...
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accent adjectival adjective adverb alphabet ancient Anglo-Saxon become BISHOP called Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer cloth compound conjunction consonant Danish dialect distinction English language example expression Extra fcap Faery Queene familiar flexion following quotation French words function German Gothic Gothic languages grammar Greek guttural habit haue Hebrew High Dutch illustration infinitive inflections instances interjection Italian John John Keble King Latin Layamon letter literature Lord means mind modern Mosogothic native nature noun observe old Saxon original Ormulum orthography participle person philology phonetic phrasal phrase plural poet poetry prefix preposition present preterite pronoun pronunciation reader relics rhyme rhythm Romanesque Saxon Second Edition seems sense sentence Shakspeare shew signifies singular sort sound speak speech spelling Spenser substantival substantive syllable symbolic words syntax termination thing thou tion traces translated verb vowel W. W. Skeat writing written þat