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Перевод: locative speek locative


[прилагательное]
местный;
[существительное]
местный падеж


Тезаурус:

  1. Its contents are classified into chapters on spelling and pronunciation, locative names (from English, French and other continental languages), surnames of relationship, those from native and other personal names, from offices held or occupations followed, compound names and nicknames of all kinds, oaths, colloquial expressions and phrases which have given rise to family names.
  2. Locative came ashore later, and broke up on the South Donegal coast.
  3. Also contributing to the effect are what may be called abstract locative nouns, indicating geometrical features: lines, division, end, track, head, line, edge, joint, sweep, curves, etc.
  4. At about 0345 it was decided to try to position Locative in a better position for helicopter winching by towing her into the wind.
  5. Locative names such as those described above, and many others of like kind, were, as has been suggested, quite without meaning outside the limited area in which they were coined.
  6. At the highest level of society there were the names given to the great tenants-in-chief who held their estates directly of the Conqueror, and it must be remembered that if these magnates were already powerful in their own country they may even have brought locative bynames with them, as was the case of William de Moyon already mentioned.
  7. Locative
  8. It was at 2345 on Thursday 8 March 1990 that Shannon MRCC notified the station honorary secretary of Arranmore lifeboat station that a local fishing vessel, the 65ft Locative , was in difficulties - drifting with no power and uncertain of her position.
  9. The second class of locative, or local names, are, as hinted in the last sentence, based on place names - such as where a man lived, where he held land, or where he hailed from.
  10. Locative names
  11. However, although at the upper levels of society locative and other bynames became surnames and survived from this early period, this was not true at the lower levels and certainly there is no uniformity in the development of surnames.
  12. There are two main types of locative names (that is, names taken from geographical locations), and together they form the largest group of English surnames.
  13. Given these qualifications, broad categories of value are locative - names derived from place-names or topographical features; of relationship - names of fathers or mothers, with additional syllables, pet names, font names and diminutives; occupational and social status - indications of trade, calling or office, carried down the centuries, often in mutilated or garbled form; nicknames - tags and sobriquets which were sufficiently distinctive, felicitous and pronounceable as to stand the test of time.

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