In our examination of C. D. Buck's dictionary of synonyms we started from the fact that individual synonymic sets show frequent repetitions of identical or similar phonemes in independent radical morphemes. In the work of the Indo-Europeah scholars this fact which clearly goes beyond. the frame of generally recognized onomatopoetic terms has either been overlooked or - because ar the theoretical suppositions to the contrary - bas received no particular attention, even when observed. Despite the tiresome labour required by such an undertaking, it seemed worth while to proceed to a systematic investigation which rriight establish whether all this can be due to a broader regularity in the parallel naming of the same realit.y. By mearts of a co...
Introduction. The universal classification of onomatopoeic words was first introduced in 1969 by Sta...
The notion of HEAD is reflected in the basic lexicon of all known languages; the identification of t...
Greek speakers say "ovpa", Germans "schwanz'' and the French "queue'' to describe what English speak...
In our examination of C. D. Buck's dictionary of synonyms we started from the fact that individual s...
In our examination of C. D. Buck's dictionary of synonyms we started from the fact that individual s...
The repetition of phonemic characteristics in radical morphemes in sets of synonyms from Indoeuropea...
The repetition of phonemic characteristics in radical morphemes in sets of synonyms from Indoeuropea...
With these few words the famous linguist A. Maillet concisely formulated the objections against t...
Through its continuations our treatise has now acquired a size unu sual for the present pe...
The next two notional groups to be examined in our inquiry investigating the correlation between sou...
Polomé E. Buck (Carl Darling). A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European Lang...
If we hope to be good at English, we must learn En-glish vocabulary. Usually, when we study English ...
Leroy Maurice. Carl Darling Buck, A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European L...
It is argued that echo -words result from the tension between a requirement that penalizes a sequenc...
In the modern world, the synonyms of different languages are given serious attention and they are an...
Introduction. The universal classification of onomatopoeic words was first introduced in 1969 by Sta...
The notion of HEAD is reflected in the basic lexicon of all known languages; the identification of t...
Greek speakers say "ovpa", Germans "schwanz'' and the French "queue'' to describe what English speak...
In our examination of C. D. Buck's dictionary of synonyms we started from the fact that individual s...
In our examination of C. D. Buck's dictionary of synonyms we started from the fact that individual s...
The repetition of phonemic characteristics in radical morphemes in sets of synonyms from Indoeuropea...
The repetition of phonemic characteristics in radical morphemes in sets of synonyms from Indoeuropea...
With these few words the famous linguist A. Maillet concisely formulated the objections against t...
Through its continuations our treatise has now acquired a size unu sual for the present pe...
The next two notional groups to be examined in our inquiry investigating the correlation between sou...
Polomé E. Buck (Carl Darling). A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European Lang...
If we hope to be good at English, we must learn En-glish vocabulary. Usually, when we study English ...
Leroy Maurice. Carl Darling Buck, A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European L...
It is argued that echo -words result from the tension between a requirement that penalizes a sequenc...
In the modern world, the synonyms of different languages are given serious attention and they are an...
Introduction. The universal classification of onomatopoeic words was first introduced in 1969 by Sta...
The notion of HEAD is reflected in the basic lexicon of all known languages; the identification of t...
Greek speakers say "ovpa", Germans "schwanz'' and the French "queue'' to describe what English speak...