<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Historical linguistics / Celtic languages / Goidelic languages / Lenition / Consonant mutation / Irish phonology / Irish language / Fortition / Manx language / Linguistics / Phonology / Linguistic morphology
Date: 2004-04-16 12:03:30
Historical linguistics
Celtic languages
Goidelic languages
Lenition
Consonant mutation
Irish phonology
Irish language
Fortition
Manx language
Linguistics
Phonology
Linguistic morphology

Add to Reading List

Source URL: roa.rutgers.edu

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 447,00 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Historical Syntax and the Generative Paradigm Review article of David LightfootHow New Languages Emerge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ian RobertsDiachronic Syntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

DocID: 1ueSf - View Document

th Published in: Historical LinguisticsSelected Papers from the 1 5 International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Melbourne, 13-17 August, ed. by Barry Blake and Kate Burridge. Amsterdam: John Benjam

DocID: 1sibu - View Document

Fabian Fleißner University of Vienna Tenses and Discourse in Old High German and Old Saxon Within German(ic) diachronic linguistics there are partially conflicting views on historical tense changes, especially on the us

DocID: 1rO8M - View Document

Linguistics / Academia / Sociolinguistics / Variation / Dialectology / Speech community / Corpus linguistics / William Labov / Variety / Historical linguistics / Peter Trudgill / Linguistic competence

Chapter 28 Approaching variation in PFC: the liaison level

DocID: 1rtAv - View Document

Historical linguistics / Language comparison / Linguistics / Computational phylogenetics / Bioinformatics / Academia / Culture / Sequence alignment / Multiple sequence alignment / Comparative method / Etymology / Cognate

A Pipeline for Computational Historical Linguistics Lydia Steiner Peter F. Stadler

DocID: 1roQe - View Document