Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch by George Tobias Flom
page 19 of 156 (12%)
page 19 of 156 (12%)
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Some Characteristics of Scotch. O.E. _Ä Ä_ §15
Curtis's Table §16 O.E. _Å_. A List of Illustrative Words from the Aberdeen Dialect §17 Inorganic _y_ in Scotch §18 _D_ for the Spirant _th_ §19 O.E. _Ä_ and O.N. _æi_. How far we can Determine such Words to be of Native or of Norse Origin §20 A List of Some Words that are Norse. Further Remarks §21 Celtic, Lowland Scotch, and Norse §22 Some Words that are not Scandinavian Loanwords §23 Loanword Tests §24 Remarks on the Texts §25 PART II. A List of Scandinavian Loanwords taken chiefly from "The Bruce," "The Wallace," Wyntoun's Chronicle, Dunbar, Douglas, Lyndsay, Alexander Scott, Montgomery, Ramsay and Burns. PART III. 1. The Dialectal Provenience of Loanwords. 2. (a) The Old Northern Vowels in the Loanwords. Short Vowels, Long Vowels, Diphthongs. (b) The Old Northern Consonants. |
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