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  2. First Grammatical Treatise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Grammatical_Treatise

    The First Grammatical Treatise is of great interest to the history of linguistics, since it systematically used the technique of minimal pairs to establish the inventory of distinctive sounds or phonemes in the Icelandic language, [2] in a manner reminiscent of the methods of structural linguistics. [3]

  3. Codex Wormianus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Wormianus

    It contains an edition of the Prose Edda and some additional material on poetics, including the First Grammatical Treatise. It is the only manuscript to preserve the Rígsþula . The manuscript is believed to have been written in the Benedictine monastery Þingeyraklaustur in Þingeyrar in northern Iceland around 1350.

  4. Linguistic purism in Icelandic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_purism_in_Icelandic

    The first signs of the Icelanders' pre-occupation with their mother tongue date back to the mid-12th century with the First Grammatical Treatise (Fyrsta málfræðiritgerðin), which undertook to design an alphabet for the language and proposed separate (non-Latin) letters for the distinctive Icelandic phonemes.

  5. Icelandic orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icelandic_orthography

    A vowel is long when the first consonant following it is [p t k s] and the second [v j r], e.g. esja, vepja, akrar, vökvar, tvisvar. A vowel is also long in monosyllabic substantives with a genitive -s whose stem ends in a single [p t k] following a vowel (e.g. ráps, skaks), except if the final [p t k] is assimilated into the , e.g. báts.

  6. Talk:First Grammatical Treatise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Talk:First_Grammatical_Treatise

    The first version of Íslendingabók is known to have been written between 1122 and 1133 and the author of the treatise seems to assume Ari's work to be known. The time interval is too short. 85.220.22.139 ( talk ) 23:33, 24 December 2012 (UTC) [ reply ]

  7. History of Icelandic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Icelandic

    Sometime in the latter half of the 12th century the First Grammatical Treatise (Fyrsta Málfrœðiritgerðin) was composed, a highly original description of the language unique in Europe at the time. The treatise was concerned with the sounds of the language; it described the internal workings of the phonological system in much the same way as ...

  8. Old Norse morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse_morphology

    Verner's law shifted Proto-Germanic /*h/ > /*g/ after an unstressed syllable. Afterwards, stress shifted to the first syllable in all words. [3] In many Old Norse verbs, a lost /g/ reappears in the forms of some verbs, which makes their morphology abnormal, but remain regular because the forms containing /g/s are the same for each verb they appear in.

  9. Edda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edda

    "Edda" (/ ˈ ɛ d ə /; Old Norse Edda, plural Eddur) is an Old Norse term that has been applied by modern scholars to the collective of two Medieval Icelandic literary works: what is now known as the Prose Edda and an older collection of poems (without an original title) now known as the Poetic Edda.