The Italian Language TodayRoutledge, 5 nov 2013 - 260 pagina's 'a truly authoritative short Italian grammar ... possibly the best concise account now available in any language' - The Times Literary Supplement 'a stimulating and scholarly introduction to Italian for the serious student. It contains a great deal of original material and the authors' unequivocal attitudes to the linguistic reality of modern Italy...make it important that it should be read and discussed by Italianists everywhere' - The Times Higher Education Supplement 'a major new contribution to the literature in English...it will be an essential part of the linguistic formation of every Italianist' - The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies Recently revised to bring it completed up-to-date, this book remains a unique source on the Italian language as it is actually spoken and written in Italy. The combination of historical perspective and contemporary grammar make it particularly useful for Italian linguistics. |
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Pagina 8
... expressions and to select those which are most suitable for them to use , in speech or writing . Where neces- sary we have characterized certain usages as formal or informal , colloquial or literary , or typical of certain parts of the ...
... expressions and to select those which are most suitable for them to use , in speech or writing . Where neces- sary we have characterized certain usages as formal or informal , colloquial or literary , or typical of certain parts of the ...
Pagina 16
... expressions , learnt from sports commentators . As well as the sports pages in ordinary news- papers , Italy has the privilege of having as many as four dailies devoted entirely to sport . Readers often seem not to realize that the ...
... expressions , learnt from sports commentators . As well as the sports pages in ordinary news- papers , Italy has the privilege of having as many as four dailies devoted entirely to sport . Readers often seem not to realize that the ...
Pagina 17
... expressions is suppressed in favour of a limited and dull inventory of stereotypes , a false idiom which Italo Calvino has called an ' antilanguage ' , and has exemplified as follows . This is what a witness might say : Stamattina ...
... expressions is suppressed in favour of a limited and dull inventory of stereotypes , a false idiom which Italo Calvino has called an ' antilanguage ' , and has exemplified as follows . This is what a witness might say : Stamattina ...
Pagina 22
... expression ? Modern textbooks present a useful , though too schematic , classification into four positions combining two pairs of contrasting views , modernists vs. archaists , and Tuscanists vs. Italianists : ( 1 ) those , like Bembo ...
... expression ? Modern textbooks present a useful , though too schematic , classification into four positions combining two pairs of contrasting views , modernists vs. archaists , and Tuscanists vs. Italianists : ( 1 ) those , like Bembo ...
Pagina 24
... expressions , and their juxtaposition was sometimes incongruous and it had in many cases an unintentionally comic effect , and Manzoni tried in vain to convince Cherubini to adopt contemporary Florentine for the second edition of his ...
... expressions , and their juxtaposition was sometimes incongruous and it had in many cases an unintentionally comic effect , and Manzoni tried in vain to convince Cherubini to adopt contemporary Florentine for the second edition of his ...
Inhoudsopgave
5 | |
9 | |
11 | |
19 | |
Italian Dialects | 41 |
Varieties of Italian | 62 |
Part Two The Grammar of Italian | 87 |
An Outline | 89 |
Verbs | 133 |
Sixteen Points of Syntax | 161 |
The use of the article | 173 |
Evaluative suffixes | 176 |
Compound and juxtaposed nouns | 183 |
Position of adjectives | 190 |
Agreement of adjectives | 192 |
Position of adverbs | 194 |
Spelling | 95 |
The article | 102 |
Prepositions with the article | 103 |
Conjunctions | 105 |
Nouns and adjectives | 108 |
Comparatives and superlatives | 112 |
Adverbs | 114 |
Personal pronouns | 115 |
Possessives | 122 |
Interrogatives and relatives | 123 |
Negatives | 126 |
Demonstratives | 127 |
Indefinites | 128 |
Numerals | 130 |
Some constructions withwithout prepositions | 196 |
Agreement of past participles | 209 |
Clitic clusters | 212 |
Constructions with causative and perception predicates | 214 |
The use of si | 220 |
The use of indicative past tenses | 228 |
The use of the subjunctive | 232 |
Sequence of tenses | 238 |
The use of the conditional | 241 |
Short Bibliography | 247 |
Table of main symbols used | 250 |
Index | 251 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acceptable accusative action adjective agreement appear asked auxiliary become called chapter clause clusters coming common comprate conditional consonant constructions corresponds dative dialects direct double ending English examples expressions faccio fare feminine final Florentine foreign forms front gerund give given historic impersonal indicative indirect object infinitive instance interpreted Italian Italy language Latin leave less lettera libro linguistic literary looking mark masculine meaning names normally northern Note noun object originally past past participle plural position possible preceding present pronoun pronunciation question refers represented scrivere seen sentences singular southern speakers speech spelling stem stressed subjunctive subordinate suffixes syllable tion Tuscan unstressed usage usually varieties venire verb visto vowel write