 | Friedrich Max Müller - 1861 - 399 pages
...have sometimes been called Monosyllabic or Isolating. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. This stage is best represented by the Turanian family of speech, and... | |
 | 1861
...have sometimes been called Monosyllabic or Isolating. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. This stage is best represented by the Turanian family of speech ; and... | |
 | 1861
...have sometimes been called Monosyllabic or Isolating. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. This stage is best represented by the Turanian family of speech ; and... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - 1862
...have sometimes been called Monosyllabic or Isolating. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. This stage is best represented by the Turanian family of speech, and... | |
 | William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1862
...the case of the Semitic and Aryan tongues. They strike a middle path. With them ' two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical independence, the other striking down to a mere termination/ The difference, as Mr. Miiller puts it, between an Aryan and a... | |
 | Peter Le Page Renouf - 1880 - 270 pages
...and the Semitic languages belong to quite different stages of language, the former to what Professor Max Miiller calls the second or Terminational, the...most nearly resembles the languages of the first or Eadical stage, in which there is no formal distinction between a root and a word. The agglutination... | |
 | Peter Le Page Renouf - 1880 - 259 pages
...Semitic languages belong to quite different stages of language, the former to what Professor Max Mailer calls the second or Terminational, the latter to the...called agglutinative. Now the Egyptian language has Eadical stage, in which there is no formal distinction between a root and a word. The agglutination... | |
 | Peter Le Page Renouf - 1884 - 259 pages
...Semitic languages belong to quite different stages of language, the former to what Professor Max Mu'ller calls the second or Terminational, the latter to the...most nearly resembles the languages of the first or Eadical stage, in which there is no formal distinction between a root and a word. The agglutination... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - 1889 - 608 pages
...called Monosyllabic or Isolating. Termiuational Stage. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. The languages belonging to it have generally been called agglutinative,... | |
 | Friedrich Max Müller - 1891
...have sometimes been called Monosyllabic or Isolating. The second stage, in which two or more roots coalesce to form a word, the one retaining its radical...independence, the other sinking down to a mere termination, I call the Terminational Stage. The languages belonging to it have generally been called agglutinative,... | |
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