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1. Germanic phylogeny [2023]
- Hartmann, Frederik, author.
- Oxford ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2023]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
-
- Cover
- seriespage
- titlepage
- copyright
- Contents
- Series preface
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- List of figures
- List of tables
- 1 Introduction
- 1.1 A note on the definition of the term cladistics
- 1.2 Summary of cladistical theories concerning Germanic subgroupings
- 1.2.1 North Germanic, West Germanic, East Germanic
- 1.2.2 Gotho-Nordic
- 1.2.3 Northwest Germanic
- 1.2.4 Ingvaeonic and Anglo-Frisian
- 1.3 Computational modelling of the Germanic languages
- 1.4 Wave model, tree model, and Germanic phylogeny
- 2 Data
- 3 Tree-based phylogenetics
- 3.1 Phylogenetic algorithms
- 3.1.1 Distance-based methods
- 3.1.2 Bayesian phylogenetic models
- 3.1.3 Core concepts
- 3.2 The Germanic diversification model
- 3.2.1 Model specifications
- 3.2.2 Model differences
- 3.2.3 Results
- 3.2.4 Model comparison
- 3.2.5 Discussion of findings
- 3.3 Beyond phylogenetic tree inference
- 4 A wave model implementation
- 4.1 On agent-based models
- 4.2 Agent-based models to model language differentiation
- 4.2.1 ABMs as process simulations
- 4.3 Agent-based models with Bayesian assumptions
- 4.4 The setting and purpose of the Germanic diversification model
- 4.5 Parameters of the model
- 4.5.1 Migration and birth
- 4.5.2 Innovation spreading and aligning
- 4.5.3 Geospatial parameters
- 4.5.4 The innovation mechanism
- 4.5.5 Hierarchical modelling
- 4.6 The evaluation of the model
- 4.6.1 The concept of Approximate Bayesian computation
- 4.6.2 The spatial component
- 4.6.3 The temporal component
- 4.6.4 Optimization of runs
- 4.6.5 The evaluation process
- 4.7 The modules of the ABM
- 4.7.1 The updating module
- 4.7.2 The innovation module
- 4.7.3 Initialization and region-specific updating parameters
- 4.8 Putting the model approach to the test
- 4.8.1 The results of the example simulation test
- 4.9 Model summary
- 4.10 Prior summary
- 4.11 ABM model results
- 4.11.1 The global parameters
- 4.11.2 The consensus runs
- 5 Genealogical implications and Germanic phylogeny
- 5.1 Prelude: society and identity in pre-Roman and migration-age central Europe
- 5.2 Origin and disintegration of Proto-Germanic
- 5.2.1 Brief remarks on the stages of Proto-Germanic
- 5.2.2 The origins of the Germanic clade
- 5.2.3 Proto-Germanic-a dialect continuum?
- 5.2.4 Time estimations of Germanic diversification
- 5.3 The Eastern Rim languages
- 5.3.1 The provenance of Gothic-a linguistic perspective
- 5.3.2 Widening the view: Vandalic and Burgundian
- 5.3.3 A dialect continuum on the Eastern Rim
- 5.3.4 The development of the Eastern Rim
- 5.4 Core-Germanic
- 5.4.1 The beginning: Core-Germanic vs. Northwest Germanic
- 5.4.2 The decline of Core-Germanic
- 5.4.3 Linguistic and social orders in transition
- 5.5 West Germanic and its daughters
- 5.5.1 West Germanic origins
- Berlin : De Gruyter, [2023]
- Description
- Book — 408 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Frontmatter
- Inhalt
- Vorwort
- Einleitung
- Karl Lachmann als Grundleger textkritischer Verfahren
- Karl Lachmann als Grundleger textkritischer Verfahren
- Karl Lachmann als Grundleger textkritischer Verfahren
- Verpasste Möglichkeiten
- Zu den editionsphilologischen Positionen der Brüder Grimm
- Hans Ferdinand Maßmann als Editor
- Der Vor-Quint'sche Eckhart heute
- Joseph Diemer (1807-1869)
- "Tausendsassa" und "Hexenmeister"
- Franz Lichtensteins Ausgabe von Eilharts Tristrant (1877)
- Von Steinmeyer und Sievers zurück zu den Handschriften
- Anton Emanuel Schönbachs Ausgabe der Altdeutschen Predigten (1886-1891)
- Gustav Roethe als Editor
- Wiederbeginn ohne Neuaufbruch
- Victor Junks Ausgabe von Rudolfs von Ems Alexander (1928/29)
- Edieren mit Blick auf die Beteiligung des Publikums
- Karl Weinhold: Ein Mittelhochdeutsches Lesebuch für den Schulunterricht
- Register
- Open-Access-Transformation in der Literaturwissenschaft
- Online
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PD75 .G473 2023 | Available |
- Hübner, Julia, author.
- Berlin : De Gruyter, [2023]
- Description
- Book — viii, 238 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Online
- Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, 2023
- Description
- Book — xvi, 337 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm
- Online
- Galbraith, Daniel, 1990- author.
- New York : Cambridge University Press, [2023]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource.
- Summary
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"Supported by data from linguistic fieldwork conducted in the Faroe Islands and Iceland, this book presents a pioneering approach to syntactic analysis, 'Optimal Linking Grammar' (OLG), which brings together two existing models, Linking Theory and Optimality Theory (OT). OT, which assumes spoken language to be based on the highest-ranking outcome from a number of competing underlying constraints, has been central mainly to phonology; however its application to syntax has also gained ground in recent years. OLG not only provides a robust account of case-marking phenomena in Faroese and Icelandic; it also explains a wide range of sentence types, including passives, ditransitives, object shift, and word order variation. The book demonstrates how OLG can resolve numerous issues in competing theories of formal syntax, and how it might be successfully applied to other languages in future research. It is essential reading for researchers and students in syntax, morphology, sociolinguistics, and European languages"-- Provided by publisher.
- Heidelberg : Universitätsverlag Winter, [2023]
- Description
- Book — 289 pages : some illustrations ; 26 cm
- Online
7. Bourdieu in der Germanistik [2022]
- Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2022]
- Description
- Book — ix, 411 pages ; 24 cm
- Summary
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Zwei Jahrzehnte nach seinem Tod ist das Werk des Soziologen Pierre Bourdieu aus vielen Geistes-, Kultur- und Sozialwissenschaften nicht mehr wegzudenken. Wie aber sieht es mit der Anwendung der Bourdieuschen Konzepte und Theorien in der Germanistik aus?. Der Band bilanziert den Ertrag der entsprechenden sprach- und literaturwissenschaftlichen Forschung. Zugleich werden die Zukunftspotentiale einer an Bourdieu orientierten Germanistik abgesteckt. Dabei geht es auch um die Frage, inwiefern Bourdieus Arbeiten einen gemeinsamen produktiven Bezugsrahmen für einen stärkeren Austausch zwischen Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft bieten können
- Online
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PD64 .B68 B68 2022 | Available |
- Norberg, Jakob, 1975- author.
- Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2022.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (viii, 257 pages)
- Summary
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- 1. The philologist king: Politics and knowledge in the nationalist era
- 2. Folk hatred and folk tales: The nationalist politics of the children- and household tales
- 3. The prince of Germany: Wilhelm Grimm and the philologist as redeemer
- 4. Love of the fatherland and fatherly love: Jacob Grimm's political thought
- 5. The mother tongue at school: Jacob Grimm and the institutions of nation building
- 6. The names of the barbarians: The philologist, the tribe, and the empire.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Reyer, Sophie, 1984- author.
- [Wien] : Praesens Verlag, [2022]
- Description
- Book — 160 pages ; 23 cm
- Summary
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Und sie lebten glücklich bis an ihr Lebensende. 0Sätze wie dieser sind fester Bestandteil unserer Alltagssprache. Ganz selbstverständlich verwenden wir Redewendungen, Reime und Sinnsprüche, die ihren Ursprung in den Märchen der Gebrüder Grimm haben. Sophie Reyer beschreibt ihre Wurzeln und stellt sie ihrer heutigen Verwendung gegenüber. Eine Prinzessin auf der Erbse ist heute nicht mehr fein und begehrenswert, sondern anstrengend und affektiert. Andere menschliche Sehnsüchte sind hingegen unverändert geblieben wie die nach dem ewig andauernden Glück.0In diesem Buch begegnen uns Zaubersprüche, redende Tiere, magische Fragen, Redewendungen und Namen, deren wunderbare Geschichten Sophie Reyer erzählt
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PD63 .R494 2022 | Available |
- Tarsi, Matteo, 1988- author.
- Turnhout, Belgium : Brepols Publishers, [2022]
- Description
- Book — 329 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cm
- Summary
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Anyone familiar with the Modern Icelandic language will know that the country?s policy is to avoid borrowing lexemes from other languages, and instead to draw on their own vocabulary. This often results in the formation of a word pair, consisting of a loanword and its respective native equivalent, as the process of borrowing systematically eludes the tight tangles of language policy. But how did this phenomenon develop in the Middle Ages, before a purist ideology was formed?00This volume offers a unique analysis of a previously unexplored area of Old Norse linguistics by investigating the way in which loanwords and native synonyms interacted in the Middle Ages. Through a linguistic-philological investigation of texts from all medieval Icelandic prose genres, the book maps out the strategies by which the variation and interplay between loanwords and native words were manifested in medieval Iceland and suggests that it is possible to identify the same dynamics in other languages with a comparable literary tradition. In doing so, new light is shed on language development and usage in the Middle Ages, and the gap between case-study and general linguistic theory is bridged over
- Online
- Euler, Wolfram, author.
- Erweiterte und verbesserte Neuauflage - Berlin : Verlag Inspiration Unlimited, [2022]
- Description
- Book — 267 pages : illustrations (some color), color maps ; 24 cm
- Online
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PD99 .H48 2022 | Available |
- First edition - Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2021
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
-
- List of abbreviations The contributors
- 1: Sam Wolfe and Christine Meklenborg: Germanic and Romance: Data, method, and theory Part I: The Subject System and the Inflectional Layer
- 2: Liliane Haegeman and Elisabeth Stark: Register-specific subject omission in English and French and the syntax of coordination
- 3: Anna Cardinaletti: The position of subjects in Germanic and Romance questions
- 4: Jan Casalicchio: Expressing perception in parallel ways: Sentential Small Clauses in German and Romance
- 5: Federica Cognola and George Walkden: Pro-drop in interrogatives across older Germanic and Romance languages
- 6: Matthew L. Maddox and Jonathan E. MacDonald: Reflexive constructions in German, Spanish, and French as a product of cyclic interaction
- 7: Benjamin L. Sluckin, Silvio Cruschina, and Fabienne Martin: Locative inversion in Germanic and Romance: A conspiracy theory Part II: Inversion, Discourse Pragmatics, and the Left Periphery
- 8: Roland Hinterhoelzl: V2 and topicalization in Germanic and Romance
- 9: Christine Meklenborg, Hans Peter Helland, and Terje Lohndal: Topics in French and Norwegian
- 10: Ans van Kemenade and Christine Meklenborg: Issues in the left periphery of Old French and Old English: Topic types and the V2 constraint
- 11: Sam Wolfe: Evaluating the contact hypothesis for Old French word order
- 12: Ian Roberts: Second positions: A synchronic analysis and some diachronic consequences
- 13: Kristin Fosker Hagemann and Signe Laake: Deconstructing stylistic fronting in Old Norwegian and Old Spanish
- 14: Verner Egerland: The grammaticalization of sic: On narrative particles in Romance and Scandinavian
- 15: Cecilia Poletto and Emanuela Sanfelici: Against complementizers
- 16: Richard S. Kayne: On complementizers and relative pronouns in Germanic vs Romance Part III: Continuity and Variation beyond the Clause
- 17: Giuliana Giusti: Adjectival concord in Romance and Germanic
- 18: Jacopo Garzonio and Silvia Rossi: Functional and lexical prepositions across Germanic and Romance
- 19: Kersti Boerjars, Nigel Vincent, and Sam Wolfe: Locative prepositions in the house
- 20: John Charles Smith: 'Have' in English and Romance References Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Becker-Christensen, Chr, author.
- Odense M : Syddansk Universitetsforlag, 2021
- Description
- Book — 408 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
- Online
- Kowalczyk, Kamila, author.
- Wrocław : Atut, 2021
- Description
- Book — 602 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
- Online
15. Die Grimms : eine Familie und ihre Zeit [2021]
- Lemster, Michael, author.
- 1. Auflage - München : Benevento Verlag bei Benevento Publishing, [2021]
- Description
- Book — 480 pages : illustrations (partly color) ; 22 cm
- Online
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PD63 .L46 2021 | Available |
- Kaiser, Livia, author.
- Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2021]
- Description
- Book — xvi, 465 pages : many illustrations (partly color) ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Introduction
- Preliminaries
- The Old Frisian Runic Corpus Edition
- Runology and Runological Practice : From Autopsy to Interpretation
- What is Runology?
- Runological Methodology and Uncertainty Factors
- Transliteration Principles Applied in this Edition
- Compiling a Corpus of Frisian Runic Inscriptions : Research Overview
- Beginnings of a Frisian Runic Corpus
- The Previous Main Editions of the Frisian Runic Corpus
- Individual Articles, Short Checklists and Analyses of the Frisian Runic Corpus
- Problems and Methodological Approach to this Edition
- Methodological Problems
- Find Situation-Dependent, Material-Inherent Problems
- Step-by-Step Approach and Structure of this Edition
- Germanic Language Models and Periodization
- Some Terminological Definitions : Dialect, Language and Culture
- From the North-West Germanic Continuum to the West-Germanic Individual Languages
- Old-English and Old-Frisian against the Backdrop of the Germanic Languages
- The 'Anglo-Frisian' Model
- The 'Ingvaeonic' or North Sea Germanic Model
- The Convergence Model
- North-Sea Germanic Sound Changes and Runic Innovations
- From the Common Germanic fupark to the Old-English fufrorc
- Phase I in Detail : North Sea Germanic Innovations
- Linguistic Chronology and Periodization of Old English and Old Frisian
- Old English Periodization
- Old Frisian Periodization
- Historical and Archaeological Framework
- Archaeological Chronology and Periodization of the Merovingian Period
- Historical Sources on the Early Frisians
- Etymology of the Ethnonym
- History I : Frisians in the Early Classical Sources (lst-4th century)
- History II : Frisians in Late Classical Sources (5th-7th centuries)
- Archaeological Survey : Frisia from the 4th to the 10th Century
- Area of Interest and Preservation Conditions
- Iron Age Origins
- Roman Period
- Migration Period and Beyond : Continuity or Discontinuity?
- From AD 700 to AD 1100 : Frisia and North Sea Connections
- Linguistic Analyses
- Phonological Discussion of the OFRC
- Representation of Vowels in Stressed Syllables
- Evidence for CGmc and North-Sea Gmc Compensatory Lengthening (No. 73, 53), Rounding of WGmc *a (No. 55), Nasalization of WGmc *ā (No. 53)
- Evidence for the split of WGmc *ā (No. 52, 54), Gmc *ai (No. 58) and Gmc *au (No. 78)
- Comparison of Stressed Vowels in the OFRC to Evidence from Early Runic and the OERC
- Representation of Vowels in Unstressed Syllables in the OFRC
- Rune no. 2 ... in Final, Unstressed Position
- Rune no. 2 ... in Medial, Unstressed Position
- Rune no. 2 ... as Parasite Vowel
- Rune no. 25 ... in Final, Unstressed Position
- Rune no. 26 ... in Final, Unstressed Position
- Rune no. 24 ... in Medial, Unstressed Position
- Comparison of Unaccented Vowels in the OFRC to Evidence from Early Runic and the OERC
- Graphemic Discussion of the OFRC
- Theoretical Preliminaries and Reconstruction of the Frisian fuporc Rows
- Graphemic Analysis of Selected Forms
- Types and Sub-Types of Runes no. 4 F ōs and no. 25 F āc
- Types and Sub-Types of No. 6 ... ċēn and No. 9 N hægel
- Other Variants in the OERC and OFRC : Rune no. 12, Gmc *jāra, OE gē(a)r
- Manuscript Evidence for the 'Ominous' Runes on Westeremden B :...
- Pragmatic Discussion of the OFRC
- Previous Approaches to the Pragmatic Interpretation of Runic Inscriptions
- Theoretical Preliminaries : Structural Consequences and Communicative Context of Written Communication
- Inscription-Types, Formulae and Communicative Intentions
- The OFRC Edition
- Kantens Comb Case
- AMAY Bone Comb
- Ferwerd Comb Case
- Hoogebeintum Comb
- Toornwerd Comb
- Oostum Bone Comb
- Coins and Bracteates
- Wurt Hitzum-A Bracteate
- Skanomodu Solidus Pendant
- Schweindorf Solidus Pendant
- Harungen Solidus
- Folkestone Tremissis : Glasgow Tremissis
- Midlum Sceat
- Metal Objects
- Bergakker Scabbard Mount
- Wijnaldum Gold Pendant
- Borgharen Belt Buckle
- Yew Objects
- Arum Yew Sword
- Britsum Yew-Stick
- Westeremden A
- Westeremden B
- Bone Objects
- Bernsterburen Tau Staff : Rasquert Sword-Handle Hamwic Bone
- Hantum Bone Plate
- Wijnaldum A Bone
- A Frisian or North-Sea Corpus?
- Summary
- Results
- Bibliography
- Dictionaries and Grammars
- Corpora, Editions and Databases
- References
- Register
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2021]
- Description
- Book — xiv, 333 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
Large computational lexicons are central NLP resources. Swedish FrameNet++ aims to be a versatile full-scale lexical resource for NLP containing many kinds of linguistic information. Although focused on Swedish, this ongoing effort, which includes building a new Swedish framenet and recycling existing lexicons, has offered valuable insights into general aspects of lexical-resource building for NLP, which are discussed in this book: computational and linguistic problems of lexical semantics and lexical typology, the nature of lexical items (words and multiword expressions), achieving interoperability among heterogeneous lexical content, NLP methods for extending and interlinking existing lexicons, and deploying the new resource in practical NLP applications. This book is targeted at everyone with an interest in lexicography, computational lexicography, lexical typology, lexical semantics, linguistics, computational linguistics and related fields. We believe it should be of particular interest to those who are or have been involved in language resource creation, development and evaluation.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
- Lückoff, Dietrich, 1957- author.
- Stuttgart : S. Hirzel Verlag, 2020
- Description
- Book — xx, 612 pages, [34] pages of plates : illustrations (some color), portraits, plates ; 25 cm
- Summary
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"Karl Hartwig Gregor von Meusebach ist ein großer Unbekannter der deutschen und preußischen Kulturgeschichte. Als Jurist, Schriftsteller, Literaturhistoriker und Bibliophiler pflegte er Kontakt unter anderem mit den Brüdern Grimm, Hegel und Bettina von Arnim. Er sah sich als Sachwalter der deutschen Literatur seit Erfindung des Buchdrucks und baute im Laufe seines Lebens eine gewaltige Bibliothek auf, die als eine der wertvollsten Sammlungen deutscher Drucke heute noch existiert. Aus privaten Aufzeichnungen Meusebachs, den "Weißen Büchern", und anderen Quellen ergibt sich das Bild eines eigentümlich philosophischen und skurril humorvollen Charakters, der wissenschaftlich und politisch seiner Zeit vielfach voraus war: Meusebach spezialisierte sich auf frühneuzeitliche Dichtung, war mit progressiven Persönlichkeiten wie Hoffmann von Fallersleben befreundet und sah sich modern-weltbürgerlichen Werten verpflichtet."--Provided by publisher
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PD64 .M4 L83 2020 | Available |
- Sauer, August, 1855-1926, author, correspondent.
- Wien : Böhlau Verlag, 2020
- Description
- Book — 838 pages ; 25 cm
- Online
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PD64 .S325 A4 2020 | Available |
- Varga, Rada, author.
- Oxford : Archaeopress Archaeology, 2020
- Description
- Book — 119 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
- Summary
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- I. Introductory notes
- II. Historiographic coordinates for Roman-era occupational epigraphy
- Professions, occupations and Roman economy
- Ancient middle classes
- Historiographic outline
- III. Quantitative analyses on the primary data
- Demography and representativeness
- Encoding the attested occupations
- Space and time
- People and monuments
- IV. People and professional identities
- Tales of trade and friendship
- Doctors - the healing science
- Crafting for a living
- Entertaining the masses
- Case study: local identities
- V. Concluding remarks
- Index
- Glossary
- Catalogue
- References
- Abbreviations used in the catalogue.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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PD2013 .V37 2020 | Available |