Vulgar Latin

Couverture
Penn State Press, 1 nov. 2010
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Table des matières

2 The Simple Sentence
85
3 Compound Sentences
87
VOCABULART
95
2 Inflected Words
97
b Semantic Changes
102
c Affixation and Cornpounding
104
d Foreign Words
105
MORE GENERAL PROBLEMS
109

2 The Geographical Diversification of Latin
115
3 The Main Lines of Vulgar Development
120
Selective Bibliography
125
Droits d'auteur

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Page 73 - And he sought to see Jesus who he was; and could not for the press, because he was little of stature. And he ran before, and climbed up into a sycamore tree to see him; for he was to pass that way.
Page 24 - And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the man, and said to him, "Where are you?
Page 119 - So it seems likely that in imperial times a slight amount of geographical variation did slowly arise in Latin, affecting pronunciation in particular but perhaps also a few morphological details (ignoring, of course, the wide differences we find in personal and place names, due to the different ethnic origins of the populations of different areas); this kind of divergence posed no threat to the...
Page 116 - ... a wide and disparate geographical area, influenced by widely varying external factors of an ethnic and sociocultural type, geographical variants can arise that are noticeably different from each other despite the fact that they all form part of a single linguistic system.
Page 7 - Lann" (henceforth regularly used without these inverted commas) is used to refer to the set of all those innovanons and trends that turned up in the usage , particularly but not exclusively spoken , of the Latin-speaking population who were little or not at all influenced by school education and by literary models.
Page 38 - First we can mention a change that happened in the Republican period, that is, even before the Empire; the laryngeal aspirate /h/ was dropped, in all positions in a word.
Page 106 - It is interesting to realize that the names of simple utensils and common dishes were Latin, whereas more complicated utensils and less common but more luxurious dishes...
Page 34 - Romance regions have /e/ in an unstressed final syllable coming from all of Latin long /e:/, short /e/, and short /i/. Thus in fifth-century epitaphs we are as likely to find...
Page 29 - Consentius tells us that some people, and speakers from Africa in particular, pronounce the word piper (pepper) with a long vowel in the first syllable, when it ought...

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