English edit

Etymology edit

Old + Italian, on the pattern of Old English

Proper noun edit

Old Italian

  1. The continuum of languages derived from Vulgar Latin spoken in the Italian peninsula between circa 960 and the establishment of the Accademia della Crusca in 1582.[1]
    • 1938, George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch, Language, volume 14, Linguistic Society of America, page 224:
      The theory that there was a spontaneous development of an obscure vowel in final position on certain occasions in Old Italian has gained general currency and has been carried on in the works of the main authorities.
    • 2000, Guido Mensching, Infinitive Constructions with Specified Subjects: A Syntactic Analysis of the Romance Languages, pages 30{1} and 31{2} (Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax; →ISBN, 9780195133035)
      {1} [… T]his configuration, in which the infinitive clause is a prepositional complement of a noun, could not be found in the documentary evidence of (Tuscan) Old Italian. Another diverging property in this example is the preverbal subject after prepositions, no longer common in Old Italian at the end of the fifteenth century […]
      {2} [… T]he examples show the use of nonauxiliary verbs. Though similar to Old Italian, this is another difference from contemporary Italian.

Translations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Old Italian” defined by WordNet Search – 3·0

Anagrams edit