PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «OSCO-UMBRIAN»
Osco-Umbrian
osco
umbrian
sabellian
group
languages
italic
language
family
indo
european
they
were
spoken
central
southern
italy
before
latin
replaced
them
power
romans
expanded
known
almost
exclusively
through
inscriptions
principally
encyclopedia
britannica
proposed
scholars
included
branch
includes
vocabulary
extinct
ancient
that
survives
only
type
meaning
pronunciation
translations
relation
jstor
problem
where
none
previously
existed
until
about
italisch
proto
from
which
both
rived
merriam
webster
subdivision
containing
origin
oscus
defined
adjective
comparative
more
superlative
most
would
define
your
usually
classified
contains
titus
texts
corpus
frame
text
collection
inscr
entry
gippert
frankfurt
slunečko
praha
versionosco
oxford
dictionaries
american
example
sentences
reference
content
danshort
sabellic
belong
wiktionary
edit
article
memidex
dead
displace
audio
collins
always
usage
examples
trends
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «OSCO-UMBRIAN»
Scopri l'uso di
Osco-Umbrian nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
Osco-Umbrian e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
Morphology In the first and second declensions Osco-Umbrian has the original
nominative plural endings -as, -ds (see p. 242), which Latin replaced by the
pronominal forms -ai (-ae) and -oi (-1). In the consonant-stems Oscan shows the
...
Leonard Robert Palmer, 1954
2
Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction
Sabellic. (Osco-Umbrian). 13.56. The Sabellic languages derive their name from
the Sabelli, another name for the Samnites; both names are in turn etymologically
connected with the name of the Sabines. The Sabellic-speaking peoples ...
Benjamin W. Fortson, IV, 2011
3
The Cambridge Ancient History
It seems clear that the name underlying this group of derivatives was that used by
the Osco-Umbrian peoples to refer to themselves; a further attestation now comes
from three recently discovered mid-fifth-century inscriptions from Penna Sam' ...
4
Toward a grammar of Proto-Germanic
even failed to convince his Italian colleagues: in an important contribution to the
Hirt-Festsckrift, Devoto (1936) resolutely reaffirms the closer links between Gmo.
and Lat. and between Gmc. and Osco-Umbrian, but points out that, while PGmc.
Frans van Coetsem, Herbert L. Kufner, 1972
Osco-Umbrian (Sabellian) included Oscan, Umbrian and Volscian (and their
minor dialects).' Like the/>-Celts, all Osco- Umbrian speakers had replaced Indo-
European /k"'/ with /p/, so Proto Indo-European \?'i(s) 'who?' became Oscan pis ...
Steven Roger Fischer, 1999
6
Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture
The many similarities of phonological and morphological development that Latin-
Faliscan and Osco-Umbrian share, however, have also been explained as the
result of the long-term mutual influence of Latin-Faliscan and Osco-Umbrian on ...
J. P. Mallory, Douglas Q. Adams, 1997
7
The Foundations of Roman Italy
though the inscriptions and glosses and proper names of these and some other
tribes do represent a patois that belongs to the Latinian group of dialects rather
than to Osco-Umbrian, that fact is not in itself enough to warrant us in including ...
8
Readings in Linguistics I & II
This is here illustrated by a comparison of parts of the Latin and the Osco-
Umbrian consonant system. The reconstructed phonemes based on this material
may be regarded either as proto-Italic or as (provisionally) Indo-European,
according ...
9
Samnium and the Samnites
... centuries later were using Latinian and Osco-Umbrian dialects could be the
result of persistent infiltration by groups of Indo- European-speaking pastoral
warrior nomads who already in the prehistoric period had mingled, no doubt
violently, ...
10
samnium and the samnites
... centuries later were using Latinian and Osco-Umbrian dialects could be the
result of persistent infiltration by groups of Indo- European-speaking pastoral
warrior nomads who already in the prehistoric period had mingled, no doubt
violently, ...