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A Compendium of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-European, Sanskrit, Greek and Latin Languages 2 Volume Set

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Linguistics series
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August Schleicher (1821-68) is often credited with being the first scholar to apply a 'family tree' model to language groups.

He had published extensively on individual European languages before his groundbreaking comparative Indo-European Compendium (also reissued in this series) appeared in German in 1861-2.

The book was derived from his lectures, and was intended to save his students note-taking and copying from the blackboard.

Each section begins with his reconstruction of a Proto-Indo-European phonological or morphological feature, and then shows how this is reflected in a range of daughter languages.

This abridged English translation, based on the German third edition, appeared in 1874-7.

Produced for students of Greek and Latin philology, it focuses on the phonology and morphology of 'the original Indo-European language', Sanskrit, Greek and Latin, omitting Schleicher's extensive discussion of other languages and the comparative paradigms provided in the German edition.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108073727 / 9781108073721
Mixed media product
415
25/09/2014
United Kingdom
306 pages
142 x 223 mm, 400 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More