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PORTUGUESE STUDIES: LANGUAGE

PORTUGUESE STUDIES: LANGUAGE Language VI. PORTUGUESE STUDIES LANGUAGE* (INCLUDING BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE AND GALICIAN) Bv STEPHEN PARKINSON, Department of Linguistics, University of Aberdeen I. GENERAL AND HISTORICAL P. Teyssier, HistOria da Lingua Portuguesa, L, Sa da Costa, I982, I I 3 pp. is a new version expanded beyond the restrictive framework of the French original ( YWMLS, 43: 445) in collaboration with Celso Cunha. For a critique of the oversimplified phonetics and phonology of both versions, see A. Veiga Rodriquez, Verba, 9, I 982:34 7-53. The comprehensive title ofSchmidt-Radefeld, Port. Spr., is misleading: its contents are largely concerned with non-transformational syntax and semantics, and are listed in the relevant sections. Extremely schema­ tic accounts of Galician and Portuguese are to be found in Messner and Muller, lbero-Romanisch, pp. 44-56 and 56--67 respectively. These may be useful for anyone needing elementary information on basic morphosyntax, and (Galician) phonology. The treatment of Portu­ guese phonology is inexplicit and misleading; Brazilian is represented only by an inaccurate, uncommented phonetic transcription. The small part played by language reform in the history of Portuguese is demonstrated indirectly by J. M. Casteleiro's contribution to Fodor and Hagege, Language Reform, n, pp. 393-4I8, where almost all types of lexical expansion, http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year’s Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90002574
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Language VI. PORTUGUESE STUDIES LANGUAGE* (INCLUDING BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE AND GALICIAN) Bv STEPHEN PARKINSON, Department of Linguistics, University of Aberdeen I. GENERAL AND HISTORICAL P. Teyssier, HistOria da Lingua Portuguesa, L, Sa da Costa, I982, I I 3 pp. is a new version expanded beyond the restrictive framework of the French original ( YWMLS, 43: 445) in collaboration with Celso Cunha. For a critique of the oversimplified phonetics and phonology of both versions, see A. Veiga Rodriquez, Verba, 9, I 982:34 7-53. The comprehensive title ofSchmidt-Radefeld, Port. Spr., is misleading: its contents are largely concerned with non-transformational syntax and semantics, and are listed in the relevant sections. Extremely schema­ tic accounts of Galician and Portuguese are to be found in Messner and Muller, lbero-Romanisch, pp. 44-56 and 56--67 respectively. These may be useful for anyone needing elementary information on basic morphosyntax, and (Galician) phonology. The treatment of Portu­ guese phonology is inexplicit and misleading; Brazilian is represented only by an inaccurate, uncommented phonetic transcription. The small part played by language reform in the history of Portuguese is demonstrated indirectly by J. M. Casteleiro's contribution to Fodor and Hagege, Language Reform, n, pp. 393-4I8, where almost all types of lexical expansion,

Journal

The Year’s Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 13, 1984

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