
The Nordic Languages...
Multi-volumned workMulti-volumned work
The Nordic Languages
An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages
Ed. by Bandle, Oscar / Braunmüller, Kurt / Jahr, Ernst Hakon / Karker, Allan / Naumann, Hans-Peter / Telemann, Ulf / Elmevik, Lennart / Widmark, Gun
Ed. by Bandle, Oscar / Braunmüller, Kurt / Jahr, Ernst Hakon / Karker, Allan / Naumann, Hans-Peter / Telemann, Ulf / Elmevik, Lennart / Widmark, Gun
Series: Handbücher zur Sprach- und Kommunikationswissenschaft / Handbooks of Linguistics and Communication Science 22/2
Table of Contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- From Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic (from the mid-14th to the mid-16th century)
- History of Scandinavia and sociocultural developments in the Late Middle Ages and in Early Modern Times
- Manuscripts and bookprinting in Late Medieval Scandinavian and in Early Modern Times
- The development of metrics in Late Medieval and Early Modern Times
- Phonological developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic I: West Scandinavian
- Phonological developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic II: Danish
- Phonological developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic III: Swedish
- Phonological developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic IV: A typological and constrastive survey
- Morphological developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic: Inflexion and word formation
- Syntactic developments from Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic
- Lexical developments in the Late Middle Ages
- The development of personal names in the Late Middle Ages
- The development of place-names in the Late Middle Ages
- From Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic: The development of types of text
- From Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic: The language of the translations I: Icelandic and Norwegian translations
- From Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic: The language of the translations II: Swedish and Danish translations ...
- From Old Nordic to Early Modern Nordic: The development of oral and literary styles
- Language contacts in the Late Middle Ages and in Early Modern Times
- Language loss and destandardization in the Late Middle Ages and Early Modern Times
- History of Scandinavia and sociocultural developments in the Late Middle Ages and in Early Modern Times
- The development of the Nordic languages from the mid-16th century to the end of the 18 th century
- Historical and sociocultural preconditions of language in Scandinavia from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- Manuscripts and bookprinting from the mid-16th century to 1800
- The development of metrics from the mid-17th century to 1800
- The development of Icelandic from the mid-16th century to 1800
- The development of Swedish from the mid-16th century to 1800
- The development of Danish from the mid-16th century to 1800
- The development of Norwegian local dialects and Dano-Norwegian from the mid-16th century to 1800
- The development of the lexicon from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- The development of personal names from the 16th to the end of the 18th century I: Denmark
- The development of personal names from the 16th to the end of the 18th century II: Sweden
- The development of personal names from the 16th to the end of the 18th century III: Norway
- The development of personal names from the 16th to the end of the 18th century IV: Iceland and Faroe Islands
- The development of place-names from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- The development of the Nordic languages from the mid-16th century to the end of the 18th century: Sociolinguistic aspects
- The development of the types of text in the Nordic languages from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- The significance of translations for linguistic developments from the 16th to the end of the 18th century: The case of Swedish
- Language contact in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries - the Kingdom of Sweden
- The role of schools and education from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- The role of language cultivators and grammarians for the Nordic linguistic development in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries
- Historical and sociocultural preconditions of language in Scandinavia from the 16th to the end of the 18th century
- The Nordic languages in the 19th century
- The impact of education and literacy on language development in the 19th century
- Sources of written and oral languages in the 19th century
- The development of metrics in 19th century poetry .
- The Nordic languages in the 19th century I: Phonology and orthography
- The Nordic languages in the 19th century II: Morphology
- The lexicon of the Nordic languages in the 19th century
- Nationalism and Scandinavianism in the development of the Nordic languages in the 19th century
- Special linguistic developments in 19th-century Norway .
- Swedish in Finland in the 19th century
- The development of the types of text in the 19th century
- Standard and colloquial languages in Scandinavia in the 19th century
- The language of 19th and 20th century translations I: Swedish
- The language of 19th century translations II: Danish . .
- The language of 19th century translations III: Norwegian
- The language of 19th century translations IV: Icelandic
- A sociolinguistic profile of the Nordic languages in the 19th century
- Russenorsk: Language contact in Scandinavia in the 19th century
- Stylistic developments in the Nordic languages in the 19th century
- Conversational culture in 19th century Scandinavia
- The impact of education and literacy on language development in the 19th century
- The Nordic languages in the 20th century
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century I: Icelandic
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century II: Faroese
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century III: Norwegian
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century IV: Swedish
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century V: Danish
- The special case of Norway in the 20th century: Language conflict and language planning
- Swedish in Finland in the 20th century
- Metrics in 20th century poetry
- Types of text in the Nordic languages of the 20th century
- Written language and oral colloquial language in the 20th century: A survey
- Dialects and regional linguistic varieties in the 20th century I: Sweden and Finland
- Dialects and regional linguistic varieties in the 20th century II: Norway
- Dialects and regional linguistic varieties in the 20th century III: Denmark
- Written language and forms of speech in Icelandic in the 20th century
- Written language and forms of speech in Faroese in the 20th century
- Social stratification in the present-day Nordic languages I: Swedish
- Social stratification in the present-day Nordic languages II: Norwegian
- Social stratification in the present-day Nordic languages III: Danish
- Social stratification in the present-day Nordic languages IV: Icelandic
- Social stratification in the present-day Nordic languages V: Faroese
- The language of broadcasting and television in the 20th century
- Trends in the linguistic development since 1945 I: Swedish
- Trends in the linguistic development since 1945 II: Danish
- Trends in the linguistic development since 1945 III: Norwegian
- Trends in the linguistic development since 1945 IV: Icelandic
- Trends in the linguistic development since 1945 V: Faroese
- Future perspectives for the history of the Nordic languages
- The standard languages and their systems in the 20th century I: Icelandic
- Special aspects of Nordic language history I: Typology
- Special aspects of Nordic language history II: Social stratification
- Special aspects of Nordic language history III: Special languages and languages for specific purposes
- Special languages and their social and functional dimensions I: Socially dependent varieties
- Special languages and their social and functional dimensions II: Languages for specific purposes and institutional linguistic
varieties
- Special languages and their social and functional dimensions III: Slang
- Special languages and their social and functional dimensions I: Socially dependent varieties
- Special aspects of Nordic language history IV: Language cultivation and language planning
- Language cultivation and language planning I: Denmark
- Language cultivation and language planning II: Sweden
- Language cultivation and language planning III: Norway
- Language cultivation and language planning IV: Iceland
- Language cultivation and language planning V: Faroe Islands
- General tendencies in Nordic language cultivation and language planning
- Language cultivation and language planning I: Denmark
- Special aspects of Nordic language history V: Language contact
- Interscandinavian language contact I: Internal communication and comprehensibility problems
- Interscandinavian language contact II: Linguistic influence
- Interscandinavian language contact III: The Norwegian form of bilingualism
- Language contact outside Scandinavia I: In the Baltic
- Language contact outside Scandinavia II: with Celtic languages
- Language contact outside Scandinavia III: with England and Scotland
- Language contact outside Scandinavia IV: with France
- Language contact outside Scandinavia V: Loans from Latin and Greek
- Language contact outside Scandinavia VI: with Germany
- Bilingualism in Schleswig, Finland, North Sweden, Northern Norway, the Faroe Islands and Greenland
- Linguistic minorities in Scandinavia I: Indigenous minorities
- Linguistic minorities in Scandinavia II: Immigrant minorities
- History of the Scandinavian emigrant languages ...
- History of foreign languages in the Scandinavian countries
- Interscandinavian language contact I: Internal communication and comprehensibility problems
The development of the Nordic languages from the mid-16th century to the end of the 18 th century

Citation Information
The Nordic Languages
An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages
Edited by Bandle, Oskar / Braunmüller, Kurt / Jahr, Ernst Hakon / Karker, Allan / Naumann, Hans-Peter / Teleman, Ulf / Elmevik, Lennart / Widmark, Gun
Walter de Gruyter
2002
eBook ISBN: 9783110197068

















Comments (0)