Why do some patterns typologically common, while others are rare or unattested? |
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Some scholars occasionally propose an unattested revision of Mark, a deutero-Mark, being the base of what Matthew and Luke used. |
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To be a man's name it would have to be a contraction of Junianus, of a sort of contraction which is otherwise unattested. |
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This bespeaks a congruence that belies the alleged dichotomy, which Gerdmar again finds unattested in specific underlying data. |
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Yet not one of the names in this list of nationsis historically unattested, not even that of the unlikely-sounding Gepids. |
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On the other hand, we've learned how to reconstruct unattested proto-languages from their attested descendants and how to work out the family tree of related languages. |
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Note that those like Mack, who can be awarded respect for their hypotheses of documents otherwise unattested, are not at an advantage over our thesis. |
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He then rearranges the triads and posits the existence of unattested missing texts until he produces a scheme that conforms to this assumption. |
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The diversification of the parent language into the attested branches of daughter languages is historically unattested. |
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Note that the Old Saxon and Old Frisian verbs given here are unattested, almost certainly due to the small nature of the respective corpora. |
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A quaestorship may possibly have been held in the Social War period, but is unattested. |
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In some lines there are combinations of everyday speech words that are unattested in spoken language. |
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The surrogates reveal unattested, too-often-anonymous forms of work, and in so doing, they question the currency of art. |
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It contains a wealth of small but telling details about Nietzsche's life that, while not unattested by previous biographies, deserve to be better known than they are. |
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In the North and in the South-West, the preposition was almost unattested but still available, as demonstrated by the presence of three occurrences of twen in two texts. |
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