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Minamimoto, Toru – ProQuest LLC, 2017
In this dissertation, I investigated the usage of subordinators in Ancient Greek dialectal inscriptions and their interactions with supradialectal formulas, i.e., relatively fixed expressions shared across dialectal borders. Subordinators are grammatical elements and therefore are expected to behave in a systematic manner; supradialectal formulas…
Descriptors: Greek, Classical Languages, Grammar, Dialects
Peer reviewedGray, Bennison – Language Sciences, 1979
Discusses the rise of classicism in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome, and demonstrates how this concept represents a basis for social discrimination. (AM)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Classical Languages, Classical Literature, Grammar
Peer reviewedBall, Robert J.; Ellsworth, J. D. – Modern Language Journal, 1996
Refutes the claim that Latin can be spoken as if it were a modern language. This article is an effort to combat the movement to teach Latin by the four skills approach and to call for a return to an honest and reasonable way of teaching the classical language, along lines that help preserve its uniqueness and traditional integrity. (21 references)…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Classical Languages, Foreign Countries, Greek
Barber, Elizabeth – 1977
The active/passive system of English grew out of a Proto-Indo-European (PIE) system where the fundamental distinction was between active and middle voices. The middle voice included within its functions the relationship that now would be known as passive. The PIE voice system is preserved in ancient Greek and Sanskrit, and in the former, the…
Descriptors: Classical Languages, Communication (Thought Transfer), Diachronic Linguistics, English

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