User:Helrasincke/Todo/-istics
< User:Helrasincke | Todo
-istics (-ist + -ics)[edit]
Title | Title -ic- | Sg. | Adj. | Pl. | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anglist | 1888[1] | Anglicist | < ref></ref> | Anglistic | 1896?[2]? | Anglistic | 1906[3] 1930[4] | Anglistics | 1927[5] 1930[6] |
Germanist | < ref></ref> | Germanicist | < ref></ref> | Germanistic | < ref></ref> | Germanistic | < ref></ref> | Germanistics | < ref></ref> |
Slavist | < ref></ref> | Slavicist | < ref></ref> | Slavistic | < ref></ref> | Slavistic | < ref></ref> | Slavistics | < ref></ref> |
Romanist | 19th c.< ref></ref> | Romanicist | < ref></ref> | Romanistic | < ref></ref> | Romanistic | < ref></ref> | Romanistics | < ref></ref> |
Medievalist | Medievalistic | medievalistic | Medievalistics | ||||||
Medievist | Medievistic | medievistic | Medievistics |
Balkanistics ·
Bohemistics ·
Bulgaristics ·
Hispanistics ·
Hungaristics ·
Iranistics ·
Koreanistics ·
Macedonistics ·
Polonistics ·
Russistics ·
Serbistics ·
Slovakistics ·
Ukrainistics ·
Yugoslavistics ·
Also:
medievalistics ·
Medievalistics ·
medievistics ·
Medievistics ·
- ^ 1888 January 1, The Journal of Education, a Monthly Record and Review, volume X, London: […] William Rice, […], page 32, column 2:
- Most Anglists, it appears, in Germany conceive that they have done their duty if they have studied thoroughly Gothic, German, and English; but they are warned that no one can pretend to be a serious student of English who has not mastered the Old Norse and made himself acquainted generally with the Scandinavian languages, besides possessing a competent knowledge of comparative grammar and of Sanskrit.
- ^ 1896, “Editor's Preface”, in C. H. Hereford, editor, The Tragedy of Kind Richard II (Complete Work of William Shakespeare):
- On the other hand, for the relatively few words already handled in the New English Dictionary, he has been content to draw freely upon that great treasury of concrete Anglistic.
- ^ 1906, “On some cases of Scandinavian influence in English”, in Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen, volumes 117-118, Westermann, page 34:
- In a little book which deserves to be better known in non-Scandinavian Anglistic circles, half a hundred at least may be found to occur in the Scotch dialect as spoken in the Shetlands; compare De Norröne Sprog på Shetland af Jakob Jakobsen (Köbenhavn, Prior, 1897).
- ^ 1930, Kemp Malone, “The Terminology of Anglistics.”, in The English Journal, volume 19, number 8, →JSTOR, page 639:
- English studies are now vigorously pursued in our universities, and the childhood of Anglistic scholarship now lies definitely in the past.
- ^ 1927, Lawrence Counselman Wroth, editor, The Johns Hopkins Alumni Magazine: Published in the Interest of the University and the Alumni[1], volume 15, Johns Hopkins Alumni Association, page 116:
- The history of our English department thus begins with one of the greatest names that Anglistics in America has to offer.
- ^ 1930, Kemp Malone, “The Terminology of Anglistics.”, in The English Journal, volume 19, number 8, →JSTOR, page 643:
- Regularly on the Continent, and widely in America as well, that part of Anglistics devoted to the editing of texts is called English philology.