Results 321 to 330 of about 311,287 (362)

Linguistics and Philology

Language, 1929
To the recently renewed discussion' of the terms 'linguistics' and 'philology' something may perhaps be added. The problem is not to stake out theoretical claims to portions of the field of scholarship,2 but simply to recognize certain actually existing types of scholarly activity and apply to them labels in such a way as to minimize the risk of ...
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Putting Philology Back into Linguistics

Hispanic Research Journal, 2011
AbstractThe history of the Spanish language (and of all the standardized Romance languages) is defined by its establishment as an Ausbau language, a process which is known to us only through written texts. This article begins with a critical appraisal of what can be deduced from the philological study of texts and then presents a number of case studies
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Comparative Philology and Linguistics

2009
Questions about the ancient Greek language arise in many areas of Hellenic studies and might include, for example: Which linguistic characteristics of the Homeric poems as we have them are particularly ancient? Under what circumstances does Thucydides use an aorist participle in preference to a present participle?
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From Philology to Linguistics

2019
We now move into a period in which, in both cultural polities, the study of language became more fully professionalised than ever before and we can start speaking about something like “linguistics” in the sense of a dedicated science of language. In his Presidential Address to the Linguistic Association of America in the mid 1960s (Hockett 1965: 185 ...
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Philology to Linguistics: Constructive to Literary Study

South Central Review, 1984
A prominent current concern at the celebration of two anniversaries is the relationship between linguistic and literary studies. One of these commemorations, marking the bicentenary of the founding, in January 1784, of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, is associated with the beginnings of linguistics as a separate discipline, for in his address at the ...
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Philology, Linguistics, and the Discourse of the Medieval Text

Speculum, 1990
Philology, as Stephen Nichols suggests in his introductory remarks, has come to be equated in the minds of many with a dessicated and dogmatic textual praxis which, through the minutious methodologies of paleography, historical grammar, and the textual criticism of "Monsieur Procuste, Philologue,"' has reduced medieval literary "monuments" to the ...
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