Meets the human in surely the human who you meet, during the year, in time boundless wilderness, does not have surely early one step, also does not have late one step, has caught up with coincidentally, that also does not have other speech to be possible to say, only has gently asks ...
169 s.v. To WORK:peoρcans/bƿeoꞃcan(the first letter is Old English wynn, which represents the sound /w/, and the fourth is “insular r”; you can see the original entry in the left columnhere) 175 s.v. MOʹTHER:moðons/bmoðor 211 s.v. LAʹTED:late: s/blate...
Turner claims that the subjunctive 'continued to lose ground throughout the 18th and 19th centuries […] in spite of the predictable efforts by some of the early English grammarians to arrest the decline' (Turner, 1980, p. 272). This view is not shared by Strang, who maintains that the...
This paper suggests that all Early Modern English dialects may be fitted into a simple system of classification (types A through D) based upon the relative heights of their long front vowels. Research into this period has always focused more on the trajectories of individual phonemes than on ...
On the basis of this statement one can assume that George Choumnos was an active public notary in Chandaka in the early 1500s. This can be confirmed by the information provided from the archive number 137 of the Spyros Theotokes’s catalog of public notaries in Crete, which is nowadays ...
Early in September, Vanessa Ruiz, a news anchor at 12News Arizona, caused a mini-controversy with the way she pronounces Spanish words on air. Ruiz is a native speaker of Spanish, and viewers were getting upset that she rolled her “r” when saying words of Spanish origin. She defended ...