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Contents
20 other sections not shown Common terms and phrasesA. F. and M. E. A. F. form A. F. origin A. F. words allied Anglo-French Anglo-Saxon aphaeresis aphesis Arabic Aryan became M. E. become borrowed Celtic Central French century Chaucer close common consonant consonantal Cotgrave denoted derived dialect Dictionary Diet dimin diphthong disappears epenthetic etymology examples excrescent final Folk-Latin French words Gaston Paris gives Godefroy Goth Greek Grimm's Law Hence heraldry initial inserted Ital Italian labialisation language large number later Latin words lost Low Lat M. E. and A. F. Medially Middle English modern English modern French number of words obsolete occurs palatalised phonetic preceding prefix pronounced pronunciation remains remarkable rime Romance languages Schwan sense short sometimes Span Spanish spelling spelt stem suffix symbol syncopated trilled unaccented usually verb voiceless vowel Vulgate whence F whilst written References to this bookFrom Google ScholarThe Grammar of Spenser's Faerie QueeneHerbert W Sugden - 1936 - Language Diachrony And Synchrony In Twentieth-century Lexical Semantics ...John Lyons - 1999 - Transactions of the Philological Society El Problema Conceptual De La EtimologÍa Popular: Estudio ...Paloma Tejada Caller El Problema Conceptual De La EtimologÍa Popular: Estudio ...Paloma Tejada Caller References from web pagesJSTOR: Principles of English Etymology Early Modern English - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ilink Shipman Library Catalog Who were the vikings? Where did they come from? - Yahoo!Xtra Answers 【古本・古書(販売/買取)】本を愛する人の総合サイト・スーパー源氏 ... English Dialects asterisk Bibliographic information |