Article
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
DIE WESTFRÄNKISCHE LAUTVERSCHIEBUNG NACH DEM ZEUGNIS DER FRANZÖSISCHEN ETYMOLOGIE
-
KLAUS-PETER LANGE
Published/Copyright:
July 16, 2009
Online erschienen: 2009-07-16
Erschienen im Druck: 2001
© 2001 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- WILLIAM LABOV AND THE ORIGINS OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS
- ON THE MECHANISMS OF MORPHOLOGICAL CHANCE
- REMARKS ON THE UNIDIRECTIONALITY PRINCIPLE IN GRAMMATICALIZATION
- ON THE PLAUSIBILITY OF OLD ENGLISH DIALECTOLOGY: THE NINTH-CENTURY KENTISH CHARTER MATERIAL
- SOURCES OF MARKEDNESS IN LANGUAGE STRUCTURES
- ON THE FRICATIVIZATION OF /r/ AND THE FRENCH-CREE CONNECTION
- DIE WESTFRÄNKISCHE LAUTVERSCHIEBUNG NACH DEM ZEUGNIS DER FRANZÖSISCHEN ETYMOLOGIE
- WHY OLD FRISIAN IS REALLY MIDDLE FRISIAN
- PUNCTUATION PRACTICE IN A LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLISH MEDICAL REMEDYBOOK
- PERCEPTUAL FACTORS AND WORD ORDER CHANCE IN ENGLISH
- THE POSITION OF SUBJECT PRONOUNS AND FINITE VERBS IN OLD ENGLISH
- SPEECH PERCEPTION, SOUND CHANCE, AND THE SLAVIC PALATALIZATIONS
- THE SYNTAX OF MOOD PARTICLES IN THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH
- REVIEW
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- WILLIAM LABOV AND THE ORIGINS OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS
- ON THE MECHANISMS OF MORPHOLOGICAL CHANCE
- REMARKS ON THE UNIDIRECTIONALITY PRINCIPLE IN GRAMMATICALIZATION
- ON THE PLAUSIBILITY OF OLD ENGLISH DIALECTOLOGY: THE NINTH-CENTURY KENTISH CHARTER MATERIAL
- SOURCES OF MARKEDNESS IN LANGUAGE STRUCTURES
- ON THE FRICATIVIZATION OF /r/ AND THE FRENCH-CREE CONNECTION
- DIE WESTFRÄNKISCHE LAUTVERSCHIEBUNG NACH DEM ZEUGNIS DER FRANZÖSISCHEN ETYMOLOGIE
- WHY OLD FRISIAN IS REALLY MIDDLE FRISIAN
- PUNCTUATION PRACTICE IN A LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLISH MEDICAL REMEDYBOOK
- PERCEPTUAL FACTORS AND WORD ORDER CHANCE IN ENGLISH
- THE POSITION OF SUBJECT PRONOUNS AND FINITE VERBS IN OLD ENGLISH
- SPEECH PERCEPTION, SOUND CHANCE, AND THE SLAVIC PALATALIZATIONS
- THE SYNTAX OF MOOD PARTICLES IN THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH
- REVIEW