Lexicon Grammaticorum: Who's who in the History of World Linguistics

الغلاف الأمامي
Harro Stammerjohann, Sylvain Auroux, James Kerr
Niemeyer, 1996 - 1047 من الصفحات

The "Lexicon Grammaticorum" is a comprehensive reference book that provides information on the lives and work of all scholars and thinkers throughout the world who have concerned themselves down the ages with the study and description of language. The "Lexicon" contains articles on more than 1,500 representatives of the world's linguistic traditions, written by 422 authors from 27 countries. Generally, an article consists of a biography, an abstract of the linguist's achievements, including his or her influence, and a two-part bibliography, listing first his or her writings, then those about him or her. Whenever possible, the references are complete; where the works are two numerous for them all to be listed, as is often the case with more recent linguists, only the main titles appear, with references to already existing bibliographies.

The aim of the "Lexicon" is twofold: namely to provide access to the history of linguistics through its most important representatives and to combine the world's diverse linguistic traditions in one book, thus showing what is individual and is universal in human thought about language.

المحتوى

PIERRE DU RYER Lucrèce Tragédie 1638 Texte établi et présenté
322
Coloma Lleal La formación de las lenguas romances peninsulares
338
Catherine E Harre TENER + Past Participle A case study in lingui
351
Ulrich Engel Mihai Isbăşescu Speranţa Stănescu Octavian
366
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