Arkiv för nordisk filologi, Volumes 16-17C.W.K. Gleerup, 1900 - Scandinavian philology |
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Common terms and phrases
anför anser antaga användes auch beror betydelse bild blifvit bliver blott brukas brytning Bugge dansk dass Didrik eigi eine findes finnes form Fortællingen fråga följande FÖLJD förekommer förklaras gamle gott grund gös hafi hafva Halvdan hand hann Harald hava have hele Historie hvilka hvilket hörer ikke Jónsson Kock Konge konsonant konungs kort land lines mening motsvarande möjligt namn nicht ning nord NORDISK FILOLOGI Noreen Norge norske nysv Odin ordet Plac prof saga sagan Sagn Sagnet senare skrifter språk stelle synes þađ þat þeir því torde tydligen typen ursprungligen uttryck verb verbet vers verse viđ visa visan vokal yngre äfven äldre
Popular passages
Page 304 - in the North Atlantic about the end of the fourteenth century, and the claim founded thereon to a Venetian discovery of America: A criticism and an indictment. London.
Page 284 - five Ambales Rimur and other illustrative texts, for the most part now first printed, and an introductory essay by Israel
Page 348 - weder er sich vergienge oder in der luft enpfienge, oder lebende würde begraben, oder ze himele uf erhaben, oder
Page 236 - and make the predicate, as the bearer of the most important idea, upon which naturally the main stress lies, precede the subject, which is either known already or to be known easily, and is of a relatively minor weight”.
Page 279 - Chronologisk Fortegnelse over hidtil trykte Diplomer og andre Brevskaber til Oplysning af den danske Historie.
Page 92 - The order of words in old norse prose with occasional references to the other germanic dialects
Page 234 - “if it be true that the verbmodifier (object and adverb) must follow the verb, which it modifies, thus showing the strictest possible local and logical coherence with it, will not that very modifier,
Page 235 - “It is thus not unsafe to say that the inversion after “ok” is in by far the majority of cases due to the universal law of Old Norse inversion after a
Page 234 - “This has been thought a sufficiently large amount of prose, upon which to base a discussion of the order of words; in fact 100 pages might have done as well”.