132 research outputs found

    A sensual philology for Anglo-Saxon England

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    What forgotten forms can philology assume anew? Reassessing how early medieval writers loved words differently than we do reveals significant gaps between past and presence senses of the physical phenomena words can index. In the early medieval language of Old English texts there remains a largely uncharted capacity for less linguistically driven aspects of expression, formed through a network of words, sounds, bodies and media: how the mute sound of a bell and the crook of a silent finger come together in medieval sign language, or how the Old English word for ring becomes a weeping, poetic gasp within a heaving breast. Such early medieval moments of communication survive because of language and in spite of language, and qualify the visualist framework through which we predictably reconstitute the medieval past, calling, /sotto voce/, for more than lovely words

    Writing in Britain and Ireland, c. 400 to c. 800

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    <i>The Role Played by Analogy in Processes of Language Change: The Case of English</i> Have-to <i>Compared to Spanish </i>Tener-que

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    How patterns spread:The to-infinitival complement as a case of diffusional change, or 'to-infinitives, and beyond'

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    Die Ergebnisse der Pestexpedition nach Kisiba am Westufer des Victoriasees 1897/98

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    Zum Poema morale

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