Books: Adjektivderivation in der Urkundensprache des 13. Jahrhunderts [Adjective Derivation in the Language of Documents from the 13th Century]: Ganslmayer
Editor for this issue: Danniella Hornby
<daniellalinguistlist.org>
New! Visit LL's Multitree project for over 1000 trees dynamically generated from scholarly hypotheses about language relationships: http://multitree.linguistlist.org/
Links to the websites of all LINGUIST's supporting publishers are available at the end of this issue.
Date: 21-Mar-2012 From: Julia Ulrich <julia.ulrichdegruyter.com> Subject: Adjektivderivation in der Urkundensprache des 13. Jahrhunderts [Adjective Derivation in the Language of Documents from the 13th Century]: Ganslmayer E-mail this message to a friend
Title: Adjektivderivation in der Urkundensprache des 13. Jahrhunderts [Adjective Derivation in the Language of Documents from the 13th
Century]
Series Title: De Gruyter Studia Linguistica Germanica 97
Published: 2012
Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton
http://www.degruyter.com/mouton
Author: Christine Ganslmayer
Electronic: ISBN: 9783110213614 Pages: 1153 Price: Europe EURO 169.95
Hardback: ISBN: 9783110189742 Pages: 1153 Price: Europe EURO 169.95
Abstract:
The study originates from the Erlangen research project on word formation in the Middle High German language of documents from the 13th century. It examines in detail the adjective derivation in the texts of the "Corpus of Old German original documents dating to the year 1300" and thus closes a gap in the research, as word formation in German of the High Middle Ages has been little studied to date. This historical period is especially interesting for research purposes because during this period, morphological structures were formed which later became permanently established in New High German.
Linguistic Field(s):
Historical Linguistics
Morphology
Text/Corpus Linguistics
About LINGUIST
|
Contact Us
While the LINGUIST List makes every effort to ensure the linguistic relevance of sites listed
on its pages, it cannot vouch for their contents.