Results 191 to 200 of about 22,829 (211)
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Creation and development of systems of weight measures in Germany, Austria and Scandinavian countries

Ethnic History of European Nations, 2023
The development of the economy in the territories of modern Germany, the peninsulas of Jutland and Scandinavia, inhabited since ancient times by tribes that spoke Germanic languages, required the use of various measures, the units of which must be ...
Andrii Zubko
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE CATEGORY OF THE STATE OF THE OLD GERMANIC LANGUAGES IN THE CONTEXT OF THE ELIMINATION OF REDUNDANCY LINGUISTIC PHENOMENA

Folia Philologica
The article presents various trends of research into the category of state of Old Germanic languages in the context of dynamic synchrony to eliminate linguistic phenomena of redundancy.
O. Shapochkina
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Middle Low German-Middle Scandinavian language contact and morphological simplification

Multilingua - Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 1997
The 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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

Expressions of genericity in Mainland Scandinavian languages

Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics, 2022
Dominika Skrzypek   +2 more
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

New perspectives on the language contact between Middle Low German and mainland Scandinavian in the late Middle Ages, and about a footnote on mixed languages which gave rise to a ‘detective story’

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
openaire   +1 more source

Contrastive feature hierarchies and Germanic phonology

NOWELE
I discuss an analysis of changes in the Scandinavian runic alphabet, or futhark, by Jørgen Rischel (1966). Rischel’s article accounts for some puzzling changes in the futhark by employing contrastive feature hierarchies represented as branching trees.
B. Dresher
semanticscholar   +1 more source

SCANDINAVIAN LOANWORDS IN IRISH IN THE SHIPBUILDING AREA: ANCHOR, SAIL, BOARD (MOTIVATION AND FURTHER SEMANTIC DEVELOPMENT)

Empirical Studies of Germanic Languages
A limited number of Scandinavian loanwords in Irish represent a group of motivated borrowings connected with cultural influence, including trade, fishing, weaponry, markets, dress, and shipbuilding.
Tatyana Mikhailova
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Syntax of Mainland Scandinavian

, 2019
The term Mainland Scandinavian covers the North Germanic languages spoken in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and parts of Finland. There is a continuum of mutually intelligible standard languages, regional varieties, and dialects stretching from southern ...
J. T. Faarlund
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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