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ITALIAN: ITALIAN LANGUAGE (INCLUDING SARDINIAN AND LADIN)

ITALIAN: ITALIAN LANGUAGE (INCLUDING SARDINIAN AND LADIN) IV ITALIAN ITALIAN LANGUAGE (INCLUDING SARDINIAN AND LADIN) By BRUNO MIGLIORINI Pro/elsoro/ the History 0/ the Italian Language in the University 0/ Florence outline of the linguistic milieu of Tuscany prior to X Dante is traced by G. Devoto,' Protostoria del fiorentino', LN, xii, 29-35. P. O. Kristeller gives an enlarged version of his article (Wd, ii, 1946, 50-65) on the formation of Italian prose, especially during the Quattrocento (CN, x, 1950, 137- 56). O. Fracastoro Martini, La lingua e fa radio, Florence, Sansoni (cf. also A. Camilli, LN, xii, 25-6) gives an intelligent survey of the impact of broadcasting on contemporary Italian. On phonological problems, see a good transcription of a Florentine text after the pronunciation of different social levels by P. Fiorelli, MPh, July-Dec., 37-9. The same author discusses the history of intervocalic -s- (Con, 563-77) and contends that of -s- should be the Florentine norm in the pronunciation maintained (LN, xii, 81-6). R. L. Politzer tries to solve the problem of the Tuscan aspiration through historic structuralism (It, xxviii, 197-201). G. Pellegrini weighs resemblances and differences between Spanish and dialects of Venetia (AIV, Cl. sc. mor., cix, 113-28). One Florentine intonation perhaps suggested by klaxon tones http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year’s Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

ITALIAN: ITALIAN LANGUAGE (INCLUDING SARDINIAN AND LADIN)

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90000930
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

IV ITALIAN ITALIAN LANGUAGE (INCLUDING SARDINIAN AND LADIN) By BRUNO MIGLIORINI Pro/elsoro/ the History 0/ the Italian Language in the University 0/ Florence outline of the linguistic milieu of Tuscany prior to X Dante is traced by G. Devoto,' Protostoria del fiorentino', LN, xii, 29-35. P. O. Kristeller gives an enlarged version of his article (Wd, ii, 1946, 50-65) on the formation of Italian prose, especially during the Quattrocento (CN, x, 1950, 137- 56). O. Fracastoro Martini, La lingua e fa radio, Florence, Sansoni (cf. also A. Camilli, LN, xii, 25-6) gives an intelligent survey of the impact of broadcasting on contemporary Italian. On phonological problems, see a good transcription of a Florentine text after the pronunciation of different social levels by P. Fiorelli, MPh, July-Dec., 37-9. The same author discusses the history of intervocalic -s- (Con, 563-77) and contends that of -s- should be the Florentine norm in the pronunciation maintained (LN, xii, 81-6). R. L. Politzer tries to solve the problem of the Tuscan aspiration through historic structuralism (It, xxviii, 197-201). G. Pellegrini weighs resemblances and differences between Spanish and dialects of Venetia (AIV, Cl. sc. mor., cix, 113-28). One Florentine intonation perhaps suggested by klaxon tones

Journal

The Year’s Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 10, 1952

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