Citazioni |
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[…] another process, whereby there comes into being for the uses of expression material which is only in a certain sense new, but which nevertheless furnishes notable enrichment to speech, and in more than one department; a process that the general history of language shows to be more important than any other. It is the composition of words, the putting two independent elements together to form a single designation. - Whitney (1875), a pag.120-121 A conspicuous branch of the department of figurative transfer, and one
of indispensable importance in the history of language, is the application of terms having a physical, sensible meaning, to the designation of intellectual and moral conceptions and their relations. - Whitney (1875), a pag.88 It is where expression quits its emotional natural basis, and turns to intellectual uses, that the history of language begins. - Whitney (1875), a pag.283
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