The book The Pennsylvania German Dialect was written by author Learned, Marion Dexter, 1857-1917 Here you can read free online of The Pennsylvania German Dialect book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Pennsylvania German Dialect a good or bad book?
Where can I read The Pennsylvania German Dialect for free?
In our eReader you can find the full English version of the book. Read The Pennsylvania German Dialect Online - link to read the book on full screen.
Our eReader also allows you to upload and read Pdf, Txt, ePub and fb2 books. In the Mini eReder on the page below you can quickly view all pages of the book -
Read Book The Pennsylvania German Dialect
What reading level is The Pennsylvania German Dialect book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
present passive force much as in English (or by the use of other forms of expression, as man-\-v&rh~) ; while the form with waerrs (werden) are felt to have a future force, and are denominated future by rlorne (cf. H. p. 94). (4) The imperfect subjunctive passive has the auxiliary between the two perfect participles in the transposed position. Ex. : wvnn ich gschlvgs ivver wvm (H. p. 94) (=z wenn ich geschlagen worden ware). Other differences occurring in the paradigm will be easily ex- plained... by the general laws of P. G. phonology. P. G. has the three historical classes of verbs : ablauting, re- duplicating, weak. The z-umlaut of the pres. sing, indicative is found only in a few verbs, the tendency being to employ un- umlauted forms, perhaps in analogy with the plural. §66. — 1. Strong (ablauting). 2. Weak (not ablauting). A. Active voice. 6 4 (a) Indicative. Present. Sing. I. ich nem (selling) such 2. du nemscht (schlechst) suchscht 3. uer nemt (schlecht) sucht Plur. 1. mar nema (schltfga) sucha 2.
User Reviews: