The Romance LanguagesMartin Harris, Nigel Vincent Croom Helm, 1988 - 500 pàgines Nine Romance languages are discussed first in context of their common Latin origins, and then in individual studies. The final chapter is devoted to Romance-based Creole languages; a genuine innovation in a work of this kind. |
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Resultats 1 - 3 de 45.
Pàgina 61
... normal - a possibility that , quite rightly , no- one seems prepared to envisage we are still faced with the need to explain first a change from an early , predominantly verb - final , stage to Plautine Latin with its greater freedom in ...
... normal - a possibility that , quite rightly , no- one seems prepared to envisage we are still faced with the need to explain first a change from an early , predominantly verb - final , stage to Plautine Latin with its greater freedom in ...
Pàgina 415
... normal use in the rest of Rumania . Romance and Other Western Sources Although the phonological and grammatical structure of the modern language had become more or less fixed by the late eighteenth century , the lexical stock of the ...
... normal use in the rest of Rumania . Romance and Other Western Sources Although the phonological and grammatical structure of the modern language had become more or less fixed by the late eighteenth century , the lexical stock of the ...
Pàgina 422
... normal ' evolutionary change , characteristic of all linguistic communities over time , can and should be distinguished from the sudden or ' catastrophic ' change implied by pidgin- isation and creolisation . The difference , in other ...
... normal ' evolutionary change , characteristic of all linguistic communities over time , can and should be distinguished from the sudden or ' catastrophic ' change implied by pidgin- isation and creolisation . The difference , in other ...
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