|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
The Early New High German Dictionary is an alphabetically-ordered
dictionary of the varieties of High German from the 14th to 17th
century.
Diese Arbeit unternimmt den sprachwissenschaftlichen Versuch, der
Akzeptanzbereitschaft gegenuber Rassismus und Faschismus innerhalb
des deutschen Burgertums auf die Spur zu kommen. Auf der Grundlage
der ideologiewirksamen Schriften eines Bildungsburgers, namlich
Houston Stewart Chamberlains, soll mithilfe linguistischer Analysen
gezeigt werden, wie schmal der Grat zwischen bildungsburgerlicher
Hochkultur und menschenverachtender Unkultur werden kann. Im
Zentrum steht die Konstruktion eines Menschenbildes durch zentrale
Lexeme wie "Arier", "Kunstler", "Persoenlichkeit", "Jude" und
"Rasse", aber auch durch ideologiesprachliche Ausdrucke wie
"Leben", "Wille", "Sozialismus" oder "Entartung". Menschenbilder
fuhren zu Handlungsmaximen. Diese werden in
satzsemantisch-pragmatischen Analysen der Prasuppositionen, der
Handlungsrollen und der Kollektivierungen analysiert. Der letzte
Teil ist diskurslinguistischer Natur und gilt Chamberlains
Traditionsbildung. Es geht zum einen um alle jene Schriften, die er
in seinem Sinne genutzt hat (z.B. Goethe, Kant, Darwin, Gobineau,
Wagner), danach um diejenigen, fur die er selbst wegweisend wurde
(z.B. die Nationalsozialisten). Diese Arbeit versteht sich als
interdisziplinarer Beitrag zur Ideologiegeschichte und zur
Geschichte sozio-kommunikativer Beziehungen.
Die Reihe Studia Linguistica Germanica (SLG), 1968 von Ludwig Erich
Schmitt und Stefan Sonderegger begrundet, ist ein renommiertes
Publikationsorgan der germanistischen Linguistik. Die Reihe
verfolgt das Ziel, mit dem Schwerpunkt auf sprach- und
wissenschaftshistorischen Fragestellungen die gesamte Bandbreite
des Faches zu reprasentieren. Dazu zahlen u. a. Arbeiten zur
historischen Grammatik und Semantik des Deutschen, zum Verhaltnis
von Sprache und Kultur, zur Geschichte der Sprachtheorie, zur
Dialektologie, Lexikologie/Lexikographie, Textlinguistik und zur
Einbettung des Deutschen in den europaischen Sprachkontext.
The grammatography of historical stages of German and related
languages was for a long time a central preserve of the series
"Collection of Short Grammars of German Dialects." Progress in
historical language description and the grammatical description of
modern languages has led to a wave of revisions to existing
historical grammars and also to a variety of new conceptions for
them. The Heidelberg Conference from 28 January to 3 February 2001
discussed the effects of new linguistic insights on the practice of
grammatical description. Major attention was given to such topics
as the corpus problem, coverage of varieties, normalization, and
the specific requirements of literary studies in connection with
historical grammars.
The Early New High German Dictionary is an alphabetically-ordered
sense dictionary of the varieties of High German from the 14th to
17th century. Its entries are arranged as follows: Each headword is
followed by concise information on the inflectional morphology and
(in the case of etymologically isolated words or words that are
difficult to classify) brief references to the etymology. This is
followed by the core of each entry, namely, the explanation of the
various senses of a word, which have been numbered. References to
time, region and text type provide important information about the
dimensions in which each sense of a word was used. The cumulative
naming of semantically-related words and typical syntagmatic
contexts provide insight into the structural, lexical correlations.
A detailed block of examples per sense demonstrates the word in its
original usage.
This innovative linguistic and cultural-historical study examines
interpersonal social relationships during the Early New High German
era. The work focuses on activities of linguistic exclusion along
with the underlying pragma-grammatical and pragmasemantic
strategies associated with them, as well as their impact on ten
important marginal groups. The study is geared to readers from all
fields with an interest in history.
|
lescheur - machen (German, Paperback)
Robert R. Anderson, Ulrich Goebel, Oskar Reichmann; Edited by Ulrich Goebel, Anja Lobenstein-Reichmann, …
|
R3,640
Discovery Miles 36 400
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
The Early New High German Dictionary is an alphabetically-ordered
sense dictionary of the varieties of High German from the 14th to
17th century. Its entries are arranged as follows: Each headword is
followed by concise information on the inflectional morphology and
(in the case of etymologically isolated words or words that are
difficult to classify) brief references to the etymology. This is
followed by the core of each entry, namely, the explanation of the
various senses of a word, which have been numbered. References to
time, region and text type provide important information about the
dimensions in which each sense of a word was used. The cumulative
naming of semantically-related words and typical syntagmatic
contexts provide insight into the structural, lexical correlations.
A detailed block of examples per sense demonstrates the word in its
original usage.
The Early New High German Dictionary is an alphabetically-ordered
sense dictionary of the varieties of High German from the 14th to
17th century. Its entries are arranged as follows: Each headword is
followed by concise information on the inflectional morphology and
(in the case of etymologically isolated words or words that are
difficult to classify) brief references to the etymology. This is
followed by the core of each entry, namely, the explanation of the
various senses of a word, which have been numbered. References to
time, region and text type provide important information about the
dimensions in which each sense of a word was used. The cumulative
naming of semantically-related words and typical syntagmatic
contexts provide insight into the structural, lexical correlations.
A detailed block of examples per sense demonstrates the word in its
original usage.
|
|