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Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Since at least the early 20th century, a number of morphological, phonological, and lexical archaisms and innovations have been identified as specifically West Germanic. Since then, individual Proto-West Germanic lexemes have also been reconstructed.

    • 52-AB & 52-AC
  2. Proto-Germanic (abbreviated PGmc; also called Common Germanic) is the reconstructed proto-language of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages. Proto-Germanic eventually developed from pre-Proto-Germanic into three Germanic branches during the fifth century BC to fifth century AD: West Germanic, East Germanic and North ...

  3. Proto-Germanic (PGmc) is the reconstructed language from which the attested Germanic dialects developed; chief among these are Gothic (Go.) representing East Germanic, Old Norse (ON) representing North Germanic, and Old English (OE), Old Saxon (OS), and Old High German (OHG) representing West Germanic.

  4. Proto-Germanic grammar. Historical linguistics has made tentative postulations about and multiple varyingly different reconstructions of Proto-Germanic grammar, as inherited from Proto-Indo-European grammar. All reconstructed forms are marked with an asterisk (*). Overview.

    • *fōt?
  5. Urgermanisch (auch Protogermanisch) nennt man die hypothetische Vorläufersprache aller germanischen Sprachen, gewissermaßen die Ursprache der germanischen Sprachfamilie, zu der neben anderen die heutigen Sprachen Deutsch, Englisch, Niederländisch und Schwedisch zählen. Es entwickelte sich möglicherweise im 2. Jahrtausend v. Chr., spätestens im 1.

    • gem (germanische Sprachen)
  6. Reflexes of [y w] in Germanic when Adjacent to Laryngeals o 2.6.2. Development of PGmc -g-and -k-in the Neighborhood of Laryngeals with -w-• 2.7. The Late Proto-Germanic Vowel System o 2.7.1. The Phonological Status of PGmc [e] and [i] o 2.7.2. The Phonological Status of PGmc [u] and [o] o 2.7.3. The Long Vowel System o 2.7.4. Late Proto ...

  7. Derivation of Germanic languages from Proto-Germanic. West Germanic languages, group of Germanic languages that developed in the region of the North Sea, Rhine-Weser, and Elbe. Out of the many local West Germanic dialects the following six modern standard languages have arisen: English, Frisian, Dutch ( Netherlandic -Flemish), Afrikaans, German