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Collective nouns denoting trees in the Scandinavian languages [PDF]
This article discusses the collective names of trees used in the Scandinavian languages, as well as the formation process of similar collective names in Eastern and Western Germanic.
Mikołaj Rychło
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Factors of variation, maintenance and change in Scandinavian heritage languages
Aims and objectives/purpose/research questions: I investigate variation and change in heritage languages, focusing on descendants of 19th- / early 20th-century North Germanic immigrant languages in America. I compare a battery of predictors (e.g.
Janne Bondi Johannessen
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Middle Low German-Middle Scandinavian language contact and morphological simplification
Multilingua - Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 1997The impact of Low German on the continental Scandinavian languages (Danish, Swedish and Norwegian) in the days of the Hanseatic League has been a decisive chapter in Scandinavian language history. Not only were a substantial amount of words transferred from Middle Low German into Middle Scandinavian, it has also been argued that Middle Low German ...
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Contact and the History of Germanic Languages
Please help us populate SUNScholar with the post print version of this article. It can be e-mailed to: scholar@sun.ac.zaLettere En WysbegeerteAlgemene TaalwetenskapThe Handbook is an essential reference for linguists working in the fields of language ...
Roberge, Paul T.
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Multilingua - Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 1997
This paper argues that the theories and methods of recent language contact research should be employed in order to renew the study of the intense language contact situation found in Scandinavia in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, i.e., between Middle Low German, the language of the Hansa merchants, and mainland Scandinavian. Special attention is
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This paper argues that the theories and methods of recent language contact research should be employed in order to renew the study of the intense language contact situation found in Scandinavia in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, i.e., between Middle Low German, the language of the Hansa merchants, and mainland Scandinavian. Special attention is
openaire +1 more source
First Scandinavian-German symposium on the language of immigrant workers and their children
Journal of Pragmatics, 1978openaire +1 more source

