Artículos relacionados a The Verb In The Second Book In Gipuskoan Bask (1901)

The Verb In The Second Book In Gipuskoan Bask (1901) - Tapa blanda

 
9781120341471: The Verb In The Second Book In Gipuskoan Bask (1901)

Esta edición ISBN ya no está disponible.

Reseña del editor

This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.

Reseña del editor

By EDWARD SPENCER DODGSON. efre y Xucraai, Trav rovrai(1 Cor. xiii, 8), sine lingua cessabunt. WAENED by Saint Paul that languages will pass away, and finding a special though melancholy interest in such which have ceased to be spoken, even as Cornish did in the last century, the Philologist ought to aim at preserving all that may still be found out about any which are in danger. Assyrian and Etruscan are interesting in much the same way as a collection of implements from the age of stone. But a language like Bask is important and instructive in the same way that the machinery of Signor Marconi, and his imitators and rivals, is. It is destined to convey the thoughts of men who will live in the twentieth century. It has some, however little, hope in it. The oldest known book in any of the dialects of a language that is threatened with death, such as A inu, Finnish, Manx, Maori, Roumansch, or Wendish, deserves especial attention. For such a work shows us how the dialect was written in the most youthful period of its life of which we possess any record. It must be respected as an incunabulum. Bask, or Seushara, is in a state of decadence. I recognize it with sorrow. The Basks, or Hem Tcara-holders as they are called in their own speech, Jleuslcal-dunak, are responsible for this themselves, as two of their best writers in the eighteenth century, Cardaberaz and Larregi, boldly told them. The clergy are the chief culprits in the matter. They are now Heuskara -losers !I f Heuslcara be spoken and written a hundred years hence, I fear it will be so spoiled by a corrupt following of erdarisms, that it had better not have lived to be so old, and one might well chant to its memory the lilting lines of the German Mezzofanti, Dr. G. I. J. Sauerwein, of the University of Goettingen, on The Death of a Language.1 The dialect of the Provincia de Gipuskoa has some 1S ee his br
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)

"Sobre este título" puede pertenecer a otra edición de este libro.

(Ningún ejemplar disponible)

Buscar:



Crear una petición

¿No encuentra el libro que está buscando? Seguiremos buscando por usted. Si alguno de nuestros vendedores lo incluye en IberLibro, le avisaremos.

Crear una petición

Otras ediciones populares con el mismo título