Results 291 to 300 of about 92,431 (329)
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The Scandinavian languages

History of European Ideas, 1991
(1991). The Scandinavian languages. History of European Ideas: Vol. 13, No. 1-2, pp. 33-39.
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Generics in Mainland Scandinavian languages

European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, 2018
Abstract The paper examines nominal expressions of genericity as found in generic texts (ornithological atlases) in Mainland Scandinavian languages. The material is subdivided into first mentions and subsequent mentions and these are reported separately. Subsequent mentions can be said to be subject to conflicting principles – on the one
Dominika Skrzypek, Anna Kurek
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Speakers of Scandinavian languages

2001
Distribution DENMARK, NORWAY, SWEDEN, FINLAND (Swedish), Germany (Danish). Introduction The Scandinavian languages are Indo-European languages belonging, like English, to the Germanic branch. Considerable contact in past and present between the English and Scandinavian languages, as well as common outside influences, have served to keep up and ...
Niels Davidsen-Nielsen, Peter Harder
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Scandinavian Languages & Literatures

PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 1950
Miscellaneous. [6121–6129: 6126 present address unknown].
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Einar Haugen:Scandinavian Language Structures.

Acta Linguistica Hafniensia, 1983
Abstract Einar Haugen's historical survey o f the Scandinavian languages covers c. 1500 years of Scandinavian language history, from the Proto-Scandinavian/ North Germanic language of the earliest runic inscriptions (before c. 550 A.D.) to the present-day spoken variants of the six Scandinavian official standard languages: Danish, Faroese, Icelandic ...
Th. Damsgaard Olsen   +1 more
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Scandinavian Languages

American Speech, 1981
Lee Pederson, Einar Haugen
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Pronouns in Scandinavian languages: An overview

1999
L'A. propose une etude descriptive du comportement des pronoms faibles et des pronoms clitiques dans les langues scandinaves. Il presente les traits communs a toutes les langues scandinaves (danois, faroese, islandais, norvegien, suedois), puis examine les traits qui les ...
Lars Hellan, Christer Platzack
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Current scandinavian computer-assisted language and literature research

Computers and the Humanities, 1971
In the three years that have passed since CHum published my first article on computing activity in language and literature research in Scandinavia, much has happened.' The most notable event was the International Conference on Computational Linguistics at Singa-Siby near Stockholm on 3-5 September, 1969.
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The Scandinavian Languages

The Modern Language Journal, 1977
Ralph de Gorog, Einar Haugen
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Language contact in the Scandinavian period

2012
AbstractScholars of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, most of whom were interested in lexical differences between Old English (OE) and later stages of the language, had made a twofold distinction between “Saxon” (consisting of OE and early Middle English) and “English” (which covers later Middle English and Modern English).
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