Introduction to the study of the history of language

audiobook

Introduction to the study of the history of language

by Herbert A. (Herbert Augustus) Strong, Willem Sijbrand Logeman, Benjamin Ide Wheeler

EN·~13 hours

Chapters

Description

This guide offers a clear overview of the essential concepts in the history of language, drawing on a celebrated German philological work and reshaping it for students who read English. It follows the original’s structure while translating the examples into familiar tongues, mainly English and French, so readers can see the patterns without needing specialist knowledge of other languages. The authors aim to make the subject approachable, presenting each chapter in the same order as the source but with explanations that speak directly to the learner.

Readers will encounter discussions of sound‑change laws, the evolution of word forms, and the way languages influence one another, all illustrated with concrete examples before moving to the underlying principles. The text deliberately starts with tangible cases, then guides the audience toward abstract rules, mirroring the way English‑speaking students best absorb new material. By the end of the first part, listeners will have a solid foundation for exploring deeper linguistic history on their own.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~13 hours (804K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Anita Hammond, MWS, Wayne Hammond and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2019-01-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Herbert A. (Herbert Augustus) Strong

Herbert A. (Herbert Augustus) Strong

1841–1918

A pioneering British philologist and educator, he helped shape the study of language and literature in late Victorian and early 20th-century academia. His career took him from Oxford to teaching posts in Australia and back to England, where he became known for scholarship in comparative philology.

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WS

Willem Sijbrand Logeman

1850–1933

A Dutch-born language scholar who helped shape early language study in English and later played an important part in academic life in Cape Town. His work joined philology, teaching, and library building in ways that reached far beyond the classroom.

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Benjamin Ide Wheeler

Benjamin Ide Wheeler

1854–1927

A gifted classicist who went on to lead the University of California for two decades, he helped shape Berkeley during a period of major growth. His career joined scholarship, public life, and higher education at a time when American universities were rapidly changing.

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