10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «DIMINUTIVAL» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
diminutival in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
diminutival im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Transactions of the Philological Society: 1862/63
106: 'It can hardly be proved that any language either ancient or modern is in the
habit of attaching more than one diminutival appendage at a time to its radical or
quasi-radical vocables.' So far from acceding to this assertion, I would much ...
Philological Society (London), 1862
2
The philology of the English tongue
The generality of the usage almost kills the diminutival effect. Downwards from
the Alps towards the Northern Sea, the l wanes as the k waxes. In Swabia it
becomes -le; in Franconia there is a meeting and a curious junction of the l and k
forms, ...
3
Language: its origin and development
tum, salirtum, though in itself originally of diminutival power, □was employed as
a collective. The latter idea is closely connected with that of abstraction, which
embraces all the particular cases. A tailor, for example, produces a piece of cloth,
...
4
Proceedings - Philological Society, London
-el, the diminutival suffix, and its representatives in verbs, '55, 6 ; no true English
diminutives in : all borrowed, '57, 107, 108. -el (fe), Eng. diminutival suffix, '62-3,
225 ; -el, S. Genu., diminutival suffix, 226. Elements of language ending in n and
...
5
Elements of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-Germanie ...
The usual suffix is -culo-, i. e. -qo- + -lo- , the second of which is itself diminutival (
§ 76 p. 205 f.). This extension of the suffix dates from proethnic Italic, and in many
words was no doubt intended to revive the diminutival force which at the time ...
6
Transactions of the Philological Society
-el, the diminutival suffix, and its representatives in verbs, '55, 6 ; no true English
diminutives in : all borrowed, '57, 107, 108. -el (le), Eng. diminutival suffix, '62-3,
225 ; -el, S. Germ., diminutival suffix, 226. Elements of language ending in « and
...
Philological Society (Great Britain), Philological Society (Great Britain)., 1884
7
proceedings of the philological society for 1852 and 1853
From the Latin amygdala (G. ApbySaXn, almond ; root ajivaaw, to prick, scarify;
from the little holes in its shell), the Provencal amandola has been formed by an
assimilation to the diminutival form, very natural in a country, and at an epoch, ...
8
A comparative grammar of the Indo-Germanic languages: a ...
The usual suffix is -ado-, i. e. -qo- + -lo- , the second of which is itself diminutival (
§ 76 p. 205 f.). This extension of the suffix dates from proethnic Italic, and in many
words was no doubt intended to revive the diminutival force which at the time ...
9
Proceedings of the Philological Society
The modern French ange stands to the old form ang-el in the same relation that
the words dom, dame, femme, page, lame, &c. do to dam-inns, fwm-ina, pay-ina,
lam-ina, &c. The so-called diminutival terminations -inns, -ina, instinctively ...
Philological Society (London), 1854
10
Transactions of the Philological Society 1857
Latham's assertion, which lays down that let is to be regarded, not only as a
compound, but as a compound of two diminutival terminations. In obedience to
this dictum, I will investigate the process by which such words as streamlet,
ringlet, ...