Modern English Word-formation and Neo-Latin: A Study of the Origins of English (French, Italian, German) Copulative Compounds |
Contents
The Three Waves of Dvandva in Indo Euro pean Languages | 1 |
Copulative Noun Compounds in Modern English | 27 |
The NeoLatin Background of Modern Copula tive Adjective Compounds | 54 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
according adapted adjectival compounds adjectival form adjectival pattern adjective already Amphitruo Anglo Anglo-Saxon appeared applied appositional attested attributive Austria-Hungary Bahuvrihi Betulius catalogue Celtiberi cited Classical Latin coinage combination combining-form combining-vowel comedy comic comico comico-tragicus comoedia compounds referring concept copulative compounds Descartes determinative compounds dictionary drama dual dvandva East-West edition element English English compound evidently example explained expression formations French frequent Gallo-Graeci genre geographical geographical reference German Graeco-Latinum Graesse Greek Greek compound Greek pattern harvester-thresher hybrid hyphen idea imitated impossible improvisation Indo-European influence inspired interpretation Italian language later Latin compound Latinists lative linguistic listed literary Mercurius Mercurius Gallo-Belgicus modern Neo-Latin nominal noun compounds noun-stem obviously offered onomastic origin perhaps Plautus possible pounds relationship Renaissance represented Rhinthon Saxons scholars secretary-stenographer seen Spanish stem Stolz-Schmalz suffix suggestion surely synthetic Taft-Hartley Act term tion tragicomicus tragicomoedia tragicus translation true vernacular word word-formation word-material