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comparative method

American  

noun

Historical Linguistics.
  1. a body of procedures and criteria used by linguists to determine whether and how two or more languages are related and to reconstruct forms of their hypothetical parent language.


Example Sentences

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Buckland adopted also in the liassic case his actualistic – comparative method to infer a possible behaviour of the extinct animals:

From Scientific American • Mar. 12, 2014

Jacob Grimm, one of the Brothers Grimm of fairy tale fame, used the comparative method to show how Germanic languages developed from a common ancestor.

From Scientific American • Feb. 12, 2013

The way linguists compare words from descendant languages to reconstruct the parent language is called, appropriately, the comparative method.

From Scientific American • Feb. 12, 2013

A methodology that has proved useful involves the comparative method and so-called natural experiments.

From "Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies" by Jared M. Diamond

And, if the comparative method is to be applied, the Corn-mother of northern Europe cannot be dissociated from the Maize-mother of ancient Peru.

From An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Religion by Jevons, F. B. (Frank Byron)