Coursebook in Romance LinguisticsLINCOM Europa, 2001 - 203 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 51
Página 175
... Italian fine for both the singular and plural . The actual opposition / e / vs. / i / is usually explained by a plural analogy to the second declension , although fine / fini constitutes a feminine pair , as is indicated by the ...
... Italian fine for both the singular and plural . The actual opposition / e / vs. / i / is usually explained by a plural analogy to the second declension , although fine / fini constitutes a feminine pair , as is indicated by the ...
Página 179
... Italian , is the repeated instantiation of the so - called Tobler - Mussafia law , the discovery that in Old Italian a sentence cannot begin with an unstressed pronoun , or clitic ( Pulgram 1978 : 329 ) . Thus , accusome , showing the ...
... Italian , is the repeated instantiation of the so - called Tobler - Mussafia law , the discovery that in Old Italian a sentence cannot begin with an unstressed pronoun , or clitic ( Pulgram 1978 : 329 ) . Thus , accusome , showing the ...
Página 184
... Italian . Its evolution is related closely to that of the 2nd person plural vi from Latin vos , a change - over ' buttressed ' by the transformation out of the Latin adverb ibi : Latin Modern Italian Old Italian nos ne , ni , no * ecce ...
... Italian . Its evolution is related closely to that of the 2nd person plural vi from Latin vos , a change - over ' buttressed ' by the transformation out of the Latin adverb ibi : Latin Modern Italian Old Italian nos ne , ni , no * ecce ...
Contenido
STUDY UNIT | 3 |
The rise of a new classical Romance linguistics? | 10 |
Morphophonology | 18 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 22 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
accusative actually addition adjective allomorphs alternation analysis apocope appears aspect assumed auxiliary cantare century chante Classical Latin clitic combination complete conditional considered constitutes continuation course definite article deletion derived diphthongization discussed ending evolution examples existence fact feminine final consonants forms function future gender given grammaticalization habere hand illi illustrated imperfect indicative inflectional involved Italian latter leveling lexical liaison linguistics loss marked masculine meaning Modern French morphological nasal nominative noun Oaths object occurred Old French opposition palatalization paradigm passive past perfect person personal pronoun Phase phonetic phonological plural porte Portuguese position possible present proposed refers reflexes replaced result retained Romance languages rule Rumanian schwa seen singular sound change Spanish Spoken Latin stage stress structure Study Unit subjunctive suffix synchronic tense theory unmarked unstressed verb verbal vowel
Referencias a este libro
C-ORAL-ROM: Integrated Reference Corpora for Spoken Romance Languages Emanuela Cresti,Massimo Moneglia Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
Socallt '04: From Chalkboard to Blackboard: New Technologies for Language ... Ute S. Lahaie Vista previa limitada - 2005 |