Hermann Osthoff (1847 1909) and Karl Brugmann (1849 1919) were central figures in the circle of German scholars who rejected a doctrinal approach to the study of linguistics. They came to be known as the Neogrammarian school. At the core of their work was the theory that European languages, together with a subset of languages found in central and southern Asia, have a common origin in a single prehistoric language. They called this ancestor Indo-Germanic (known today as Indo-European) and claimed that its descendants are all related to one another by varying degrees of closeness. This...
Hermann Osthoff (1847 1909) and Karl Brugmann (1849 1919) were central figures in the circle of German scholars who rejected a doctrinal approach to t...
Hermann Osthoff (1847 1909) and Karl Brugmann (1849 1919) were central figures in the circle of German scholars who rejected a doctrinal approach to the study of linguistics. They came to be known as the Neogrammarian school. At the core of their work was the theory that European languages, together with a subset of languages found in central and southern Asia, have a common origin in a single prehistoric language. They called this ancestor Indo-Germanic (known today as Indo-European) and claimed that its descendants are all related to one another by varying degrees of closeness. This...
Hermann Osthoff (1847 1909) and Karl Brugmann (1849 1919) were central figures in the circle of German scholars who rejected a doctrinal approach to t...