|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 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.
|
lescheur - machen (German, Paperback)
Robert R. Anderson, Ulrich Goebel, Oskar Reichmann; Edited by Ulrich Goebel, Anja Lobenstein-Reichmann, …
|
R3,861
Discovery Miles 38 610
|
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.
Dictionaries contain a wealth of linguistic data which, given the
customary alphabetical arrangement encountered in most cases, are
neither readily accessible to the user nor susceptible to control
by the lexicographer. The present volume sets out the most
important types of covert lexicographic data, dicusses ways of
improving access to them by means of philologically organised
indexing systems, illustrates these possibilities with the help of
copious examples and thus provides a key for the exploitation of
covert lexicographic information both for language-historical
research purposes and for the improvement of lexicographic
practice.
|
|