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Nous examinerons dans cette étude la question des étymologies hébraïques du Tesoro, d’une part en relisant des articles récents (parus entre 1994 et 2010) qui tous en soulignent la dimension idéologique ; d’autre part en faisant l’expérience d’une autre ...
Dominique Neyrod
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The early Middle English reflexes of Germanic *ik ‘I’: unpacking the changes [PDF]
The phonological shape of the PDE first-person nominative singular pronoun ‘I’ is assumed to have a simple history. The final consonant of WGmc *ik ‘palatalises’ (i.e.
Laing, Margaret, Lass, Roger
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Folk Etymologies in the Role of Creator of Kashubian Ethnic Identity – Rozmòwa Pòlôcha z Kaszëbąby Florian Ceynowa [PDF]
The article presents folk etymologies in the work of Florian Ceynowa (1817–1881), who is the creator of the written version of the Kashubian language, entitled Rozmòwa Pòlôcha z Kaszëbą (1850). Rozmòwa...is maintained in a form of dialogue which preaches
Rogowska-Cybulska, Ewa
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Many of us can remember how much our vocabulary grew as undergraduates and indeed has continued to grow as dental professionals. For many of us not trained in Latin and Greek we have often been too busy learning what the word means to understand why it means what it does. This article aims to clarify things a little. It explains where words relating to
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Studies in Uralic Etymology V: Permic Etymologies [PDF]
This paper is the fifth part in a series of studies that present additions to the corpus of etymological comparisons between the Uralic languages, drawing data from all the major branches of the language family.
Luobbal Sámmol Sámmol Ánte (Aikio, Ante)
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Lemko Etymologies. Part VI This article constitutes the sixth part in the series related to Lemko etymologies. In this part, the authors present the words beginning with the letters П and Р: пага, пажерити, памула, пандзір, папуля, пацалуватий ...
Adam Fałowski, Wiktoria Hojsak
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Nostr. *"be ill, dying" ? kušit.: somali dimašo "be dying", dintey "dead, deceased" (som. d.< kuš.
Václav Blažek
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‘The damned word’: culture and its (in)compatibility with law [PDF]
The compatibility and incompatibility between law and culture are identified through an analysis of relation. By way of exploring the elusiveness of conceptions of culture and of law, a commonality relating them is arrived at, one that indicates not only
Fitzpatrick, Peter
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Permeating etymology– remarks on Permic etymology
This article discusses five Permic words or group of words including *ki̮ri̮m ‘handful, bunch’, *kun ‘lye’, *li̮a ‘sand’, *mi̮r- ‘to take by force, exert effort’ and *vi̮ŋ ‘strength, might’. The words typically have an existing etymology, which in most cases is a Uralic comparison.
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