PHILOLOGY
\fɪlˈɒləd͡ʒi], \fɪlˈɒlədʒi], \f_ɪ_l_ˈɒ_l_ə_dʒ_i]\
Definitions of PHILOLOGY
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 2010 - Medical Dictionary Database
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
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Criticism; grammatical learning.
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The study of language, especially in a philosophical manner and as a science; the investigation of the laws of human speech, the relation of different tongues to one another, and historical development of languages; linguistic science.
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A treatise on the science of language.
By Oddity Software
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Criticism; grammatical learning.
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The study of language, especially in a philosophical manner and as a science; the investigation of the laws of human speech, the relation of different tongues to one another, and historical development of languages; linguistic science.
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A treatise on the science of language.
By Noah Webster.
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The study of literature in its widest sense, including grammar, etymology, criticism, literary history, language history, linguistic history, systems of writing, and anything else that is relevant to literature or language viewed as literature. Philology as a discipline has both philosophical and scientific overtones.
By DataStellar Co., Ltd
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
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PHILOLOGIC, PHILOLOGICAL.
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PHILOLOGICALLY.
By Daniel Lyons
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Scientific study of language.
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
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The study of language; linguistic science.
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Philologic.
By James Champlin Fernald
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n. The study of language in general, or of any particular language with reference to its formation and growth—it includes cytology, or the science of the derivation and combination or words from their primary roots; grammar, or the science of the composition and structure of sentences; and comparative criticism, or the art of interpreting a language by its affinities and analogies to other languages.