
Grammatical Proof of the Affinity of the Hungarian Language with Languages of Fennic Origin (Goettingen: Dieterich, 1799)
Samuel Gyarmathi(Author)
John Benjamins Publishing Co
Published on 1. January 1983
Book
Hardback
327 pages
978-90-272-0976-4 (ISBN)
Description
Samuel Gyarmathi's Affinitas linguae hungaricae cum linguis fennicae originis grammatice demonstrata (Goettingen 1799) was received as a distinguished work of scholarship in its own days, and its historical importance has been fully recognized ever since. This volume provides an English translation of the entire Latin text, including the Latin glosses of the original (with the exception of zoological and botanical terms, and a few passages where specific reference is made to Latin grammar). This translation includes two additions to the text of Affinitas as reprinted in the Indiana University series: Appendix III, a letter to Gyarmathi by A. L. von Schoetzler, and a number of notes in the author's own hand, found in his copy of the work (now held in the Library of the Lycee of Zalau). The translator's Preface provides an introduction to the work and an overview of Gyarmathi's life.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Amsterdam
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 164 mm
Weight
620 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-272-0976-4 (9789027209764)
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Other editions
Additional editions

Sámuel Gyarmathi
Grammatical Proof of the Affinity of the Hungarian Language with Languages of Fennic Origin (Göttingen: Dieterich, 1799)
Dieterich, 1799)
E-Book
01/1983
1st Edition
John Benjamins Publishing Company
€156.99
Available for download
Persons
Content
1. Gyarmathi's Portrait; 2. Translator's Preface; 3. Gyarmathi and his AFFINITAS; 4. Dedication to Paul I; 5. Author's Preface; 6. Table of Contents; 7. Comparative Orthography of Hungarian and Russian; 8. Part One: Lapp and Finnish; 9. Part Two: Estonian; 10. Part Three: Seven Fennic Languages; 11. Appendix I: Comparative Tatar-Hungarian Vocabulary; 12. Appendix II: Excerpts from the Petersburg Vocabulary: Slavic-Hungarian Comparative Vocabularies; 13. Appendix III: Schlozer's Letter; 14. Notes; 15. References; 16. Index Nominum