PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «ABLATIVAL»
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10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «ABLATIVAL»
Descubre el uso de
ablatival en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
ablatival y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
The Asia Minor Connexion: Studies on the Pre-Greek Languages ...
Most investigators (e.g. Sturtevant, Hamp, Tischler, Friedrich, Laroche, inter alias)
are in agreement that -za is the Hittite ablatival ending, once believed to be from *
-ts (zero-grade of *-tos seen in Sanskrit ta-tas "from that, then", etc.) but better ...
2
Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax of the ...
For the most part, the ablatival genitive is being replaced in Koine Greek by EK or
<X7t6 with the genitive.95 1. Genitive of Separation [out of, away from, from] a.
Definition The genitive substantive is that from which the verb or sometimes head
...
3
On the Meaning of Prepositions and Cases: The Expression of ...
4.3.1 The prepositional genitive The genitive with prepositions can either have
ablatival value, or express Location and/or Direction. In the latter case, the
genitive does not derive from a pre-Greek ablative, but it is introduced in PPs as a
result ...
4
Historical, Indo-European, and Lexicographical Studies: A ...
2 If we have now succeeded in eliminating the alleged ablatival adverbs *him, *
im, then we are left with the residual problem as to how to account for the well
attested forms illim, istim, utrimque. As we have seen, an ablatival suffix -m is out
of ...
Hans Henrich Hock, Ladislav Zgusta, 1997
5
Expressions of Agency in Ancient Greek
It is possible that examples (51) and (52) represent an extension of the category
of ablatival verbs that take OOTO. Example (51) could be considered ablatival if
the naming is conceived of as the punctual act of giving a name (cf. the NRSV ...
6
A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language
Householder (1959) has observed that formally the nouns following paro in its
ablatival sense could be instrumentals, but this is unlikely given that the
instrumental is part of the dative-locative syncretism rather than the genitive-
ablative.
7
A Companion to the Latin Language
The Latin adverbial suffix -e used with first- and second-declension adjectives is
an old instrumental (*-ehl) that was reinterpreted prehistorically as an ablative (
whence archaic forms like rected with ablatival -d). Another instrumental survives
...
8
Proceedings fo the Cambridge Colloquium on Mycenaean Studies
genitive. Evidence for a syncretism of genitive and ablative in Arcado-Cyprian is
thus provided both by non-prepositional constructs and by the fact that the
disappearance of the genitive after prepositions also involves non-ablatival
genitives.
9
Subordination and Other Topics in Latin: Proceedings of the ...
Like the OCS dative this cannot be modelled on the Greek genitive absolute,
unless we assume that Ulfilas understood the Greek case as ablatival in sense
and so chose the Gothic ablatival case. This assumption is even more
implausible if ...
10
The Syntax of Sophocles
Compare the use with ablatival prepositions: OT 398 in' oiwvwv u.aGwv; with
7tp6?, P. 971; with ex, T. 449. With lu>vGdvou.at: OT 333 oti yap av 7tuGoto u.ou.
T. 1149 w? xeXeuxatav eu.oG [ 9r)u.r)v 7tuGr)aGe Gea9dxwv (or possibly eu.
Alfred Charles Moorhouse, 1982