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Frontmatter -- Vorrede -- Inhaltsangabe -- Abkürzungen -- Kapitel XXXV. Disposition der Syntax -- Kapitel XXXVI. Subjekt und Prädikat (Kopula) -- Kapitel XXXVII. Die subjektlosen Sätze -- Kapitel XXXVIII. Stellung und Satzbetonung der Wörter -- Kapitel XXXIX. Die Ellipse -- Kapitel XL. Gruppen im Satze -- Kapitel XLI. Kongruenz -- Kapitel XLII. Vermischung zweier Konstruktionen (Kontamination). -- Kapitel XLIII. Fragesätze -- Kapitel XLIV. Abhängige Sätze mit der Prohibitivnegation -- Kapitel XLV. Die Relativsätze im Arischen und Griechischen -- Kapitel XLVI. Die germanischen Relativsätze -- Kapitel XLVII. Das Relativum aus dem Interrogativstamm im Slavischen, Litauischen und Italischen -- Kapitel XLVIII. Das Satzgefüge -- Nachträge und Berichtigungen -- Indices / Delbrück, B. -- Berichtigungen
Frontmatter -- Vorrede -- Inhaltsverzeichnis -- Einleitung -- Erstes Kapitel. Urgermanische Verba -- Zweites Kapitel. Urgermanische Adjektiva -- Drittes Kapitel. Urgermanische Präpositionen -- Viertes Kapitel. Der erhaltene Instrumentalis -- Fünftes Kapitel. Der urgermanische Instrumentalis und Lokalis -- Sechstes Kapitel. Der Dativ -- Siebentes Kapitel. Der Genitiv -- Achtes Kapitel -- Literaturverzeichnis und Abkürzungen -- Index -- Berichtigungen und Nachträge -- Front Matter 2 -- TRÜBNER IN STRASSBURG
In this fourth part of his general work on syntax, published in 1879, Berthold Delbruck (1842-1922), the German scholar remembered for his contribution to the study of the syntax in Indo-European languages (his three-volume Vergleichende Syntax der indogermanischen Sprachen is also reissued in this series), concentrates on the syntax of ancient Greek. His focus is deliberately broad as he seeks to engage classicists who are interested in linguistics or in how the Greek language was actually used, rather than in highly specialised case studies. In twelve chapters, Delbruck guides the reader through the gender and case of nouns, and explains some features seen as peculiarities of Homeric Greek which in fact demonstrate its kinship as an Indo-European language with the Vedic language of the Hindu scriptures. He also covers the tenses and moods of verbs, prepositions, pronouns and particles, and word order.
In this 1901 work, Berthold Delbruck (1842-1922), who is famous for his contribution to the study of the syntax in Indo-European languages, focuses on Wilhelm Wundt's understanding of speech. Wundt (1832-1920), often referred to as the 'father of experimental psychology', held that language was one of the most important aspects of mental processing. In order to account for Wundt's theories on the nature of the soul, and his belief that emotion and perception are acts of experience rather than objects, Delbruck compares Wundt's theories with those of psychologist and educationalist J. F. Herbart (1776-1841). Delbruck also pays attention to the explanation of such topics as the hand gestures used by actors (and the people of Naples), the sentence structure of the German language, and onomatopoeia, though he emphasises that he has not addressed those elements in Wundt's works which are founded in psychology rather than in grammar.
In 1876 the Leipzig publisher Breitkopf und Hartel launched a series on Indo-European languages entitled 'Bibliothek Indogermanischer Grammatiken'. The first three volumes covered phonology, Greek and Sanskrit. This short introduction to the comparative method, published in 1880, was the fourth. It was highly successful, with six editions appearing between 1880 and 1919. Its author, Berthold Delbruck (1842-1922), Professor of Sanskrit at Jena, was a former student of the pioneering Indo-Europeanist Franz Bopp. Delbruck expanded the horizons of the field to cover syntax as well as phonology and morphology; his magisterial studies of Sanskrit and Indo-European syntax (also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection) appeared between 1886 and 1900. This book, designed as a guide for readers of the Breitkopf series, includes a fascinating history of Indo-European philology from its founding fathers Jones and Bopp through Humboldt, Schleicher and Curtius to Delbruck's own time, and outlines the most recent developments.
Berthold Delbruck's three volumes on Indo-European syntax were written to complete Karl Brugmann's monumental comparative grammar. They were first published between 1893 and 1900, and remain the fullest treatment of the subject. This, the second volume, discusses the verb, providing thorough coverage of tense, mood, infinitives and participles.
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