enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Language contact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_contact

    The influence can go deeper, extending to the exchange of even basic characteristics of a language such as morphology and grammar.. Newar, for example, spoken in Nepal, is a Sino-Tibetan language distantly related to Chinese but has had so many centuries of contact with neighbouring Indo-Iranian languages that it has even developed noun inflection, a trait that is typical of the Indo-European ...

  3. Dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialect

    By the definition most commonly used by linguists, any linguistic variety can be considered a "dialect" of some language—"everybody speaks a dialect". According to that interpretation, the criteria above merely serve to distinguish whether two varieties are dialects of the same language or dialects of different languages.

  4. Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_Contact_and_the...

    Since Saami is known to have borrowed many words from a language now lost as Saami culture spread northwards into Scandinavia, Schrijver argues that Saami, West Germanic and North Germanic were all affected in similar ways by contact with a language or group of languages which 'shared a peculiar vowel system, whose features were impressed on ...

  5. Spanglish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanglish

    Spanglish (a blend of the words "Spanish" and "English") is any language variety (such as a contact dialect, hybrid language, pidgin, or creole language) that results from conversationally combining Spanish and English. The term is mostly used in the United States and refers to a blend of the words and grammar of the two languages.

  6. Dialectology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectology

    Dialectology (from Greek διάλεκτος, dialektos, "talk, dialect"; and -λογία, -logia) is the scientific study of dialects: subsets of languages.Though in the 19th century a branch of historical linguistics, dialectology is often now considered a sub-field of, or subsumed by, sociolinguistics. [1]

  7. The English Dialect Dictionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_English_Dialect_Dictionary

    The English Dialect Dictionary (EDD) is the most comprehensive dictionary of English dialects ever published, compiled by the Yorkshire dialectologist Joseph Wright (1855–1930), with strong support by a team and his wife Elizabeth Mary Wright (1863–1958). [1]

  8. Literary language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_language

    Literary language is the form (register) of a language used when writing in a formal, academic, or particularly polite tone; when speaking or writing in such a tone, it can also be known as formal language.

  9. German dialects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_dialects

    German dialects are the various traditional local varieties of the German language.Though varied by region, those of the southern half of Germany beneath the Benrath line are dominated by the geographical spread of the High German consonant shift, and the dialect continuum that connects German to the neighboring varieties of Low Franconian and Frisian.