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Primary, secondary, and tertiary etymologies
The three lexical kernels of Hispanic saña, ensañar, sañudo
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Author’s acknowledgments v
- Table of contents vii
- Guide to abbreviations xi
-
From particular to general linguistics
- Introduction 3
-
A. Genetic linguistics
- Linguistics as a genetic science 23
-
B. History of linguistics
- History and histories of linguistics 49
-
C. Clues as to dating
- Range of variation as a clue to dating 87
-
D. Convergence and divergence
- Factors in the unity of ROMANIA 129
-
E. Diffusion
- Lexical borrowing in the Romance languages 137
-
F. Language vs. the real world
- Gender, sex, and size, as reflected in the Romance languages 155
-
G. The social component of chance
- The social matrix of Paleo-Romance postverbal nouns 179
-
H. Lexical independence vs. grammatical constraint
- Each word has a history of its own 217
-
I. Multiple causation
- Multi-conditioned sound change and the impact of morphology on phonology 229
- Multiple versus simple causation in linguistic change 251
- The five sources of epenthetic /j/ in western Hispano-Romance 269
- On hierarchizing the components of multiple causation 297
-
J. Accentology and phonology
- Conflicting prosodic inferences from Ascoli’s and Darmesteter’s laws? 323
- Etiological studies in Romance diachronic phonology 361
-
K. Affixal derivation
- One characteristic derivational suffix of literary Italian 399
- The double affixation in Old-French gens-es-or, bel-ez-or, old Provençal bel-az- or 411
- The rise of the nominal augments in Romance 419
-
L. Etymology
- Primary, secondary, and tertiary etymologies 473
- Etymology and modern linguistics 497
- The interlocking of etymology and historical grammar (exemplified with the analysis of Spanish desleír ) 513
- Contacts between BLASPHĒMĀRE and AESTIMĀRE 543
- Supplement 559
- Index of names 593
- Selective index of key terms 607
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Author’s acknowledgments v
- Table of contents vii
- Guide to abbreviations xi
-
From particular to general linguistics
- Introduction 3
-
A. Genetic linguistics
- Linguistics as a genetic science 23
-
B. History of linguistics
- History and histories of linguistics 49
-
C. Clues as to dating
- Range of variation as a clue to dating 87
-
D. Convergence and divergence
- Factors in the unity of ROMANIA 129
-
E. Diffusion
- Lexical borrowing in the Romance languages 137
-
F. Language vs. the real world
- Gender, sex, and size, as reflected in the Romance languages 155
-
G. The social component of chance
- The social matrix of Paleo-Romance postverbal nouns 179
-
H. Lexical independence vs. grammatical constraint
- Each word has a history of its own 217
-
I. Multiple causation
- Multi-conditioned sound change and the impact of morphology on phonology 229
- Multiple versus simple causation in linguistic change 251
- The five sources of epenthetic /j/ in western Hispano-Romance 269
- On hierarchizing the components of multiple causation 297
-
J. Accentology and phonology
- Conflicting prosodic inferences from Ascoli’s and Darmesteter’s laws? 323
- Etiological studies in Romance diachronic phonology 361
-
K. Affixal derivation
- One characteristic derivational suffix of literary Italian 399
- The double affixation in Old-French gens-es-or, bel-ez-or, old Provençal bel-az- or 411
- The rise of the nominal augments in Romance 419
-
L. Etymology
- Primary, secondary, and tertiary etymologies 473
- Etymology and modern linguistics 497
- The interlocking of etymology and historical grammar (exemplified with the analysis of Spanish desleír ) 513
- Contacts between BLASPHĒMĀRE and AESTIMĀRE 543
- Supplement 559
- Index of names 593
- Selective index of key terms 607