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It was established in 1961 in cooperation with the Hegel Commission of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) and is published once a year. It has been developed in close connection with the historical-critical edition of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's Gesammelte Werke (Hegel’s Complete Works).
Chapter 3, 'The Origin of High German', focuses on the High German consonant shift. It argues that the way the shift manifested in Old Low Franconian in the Rhineland and in Langobardic in Italy is so similar to the manifestation of affrication in Late Spoken Latin in those areas that there must be a causal connection. Thus the chapter argues ...
Die Moskau-Connection. Das Schröder-Netzwerk und Deutschlands Weg in die Abhängigkeit (The Moscow Connection. The Schröder Network and Germany's Path to Dependency) is a political non-fiction book in German. It was written by the German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung journalists Reinhard Bingener and
The Germanic tribes who later gave rise to the English language traded and fought with the Latin speaking Roman Empire.Many words for common objects entered the vocabulary of these Germanic people from Latin even before the tribes reached Britain: anchor, butter, camp, cheese, chest, cook, copper, devil, dish, fork, gem, inch, kitchen, mile, mill, mint (coin), noon, pillow, pound (unit of ...
LTI – Lingua Tertii Imperii: Notizbuch eines Philologen (1947) is a book by Victor Klemperer, Professor of Literature at the Dresden University of Technology. The title, half in Latin and half in German , translates to " The Language of the Third Reich: A Philologist's Notebook "; the book is published in English translation as The Language ...
Nazi Germany. This is a list of books about Nazi Germany, the state that existed in Germany during the period from 1933 to 1945, when its government was controlled by Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP; Nazi Party).
Thesis 1 expressly implies that there should be no foreign literature in Germany, entailing a complete ban of all non-German literature, [3] at least on works translated into German. Theses 11 and 12 would reserve German universities exclusively to German students and professors, devoid of foreign elements.
The series Studies in German Literature, Language, and Culture [2] was established in that same year and continues to the present; over 350 books in this series have appeared as of 2011 The Camden House areas of interest expanded over the following years under the direction of James Hardin, emeritus professor at the University of South Carolina.