- The
Modistae (Latin for Modists), also
known as the
speculative grammarians, were the
members of a
school of
grammarian philosophy known as
Modism or speculative...
-
historically through the Gr**** and
Latin Modistae over many centuries. Gr**** and
Latin intellectuals as well as the
Modistae have
contributed to the different...
-
scholars who
studied the
grammar of
Sanskrit Speculative grammarians or
Modistae, a 13th and 14th
century school of
philosophy Grammarians of Basra, scholars...
- century.
Leading scholars included Martin of
Dacia and
Thomas of
Erfurt (see
Modistae).
Linguists of the
Renaissance and
Baroque periods such as
Johannes Goropius...
- c. 1300) was a
German philosopher, the most
important of the so-called
Modistae. He was
probably a
native of Erfurt. He had some
connection to the University...
- Modi
significandi des
Martinus de
Dacia Quaestiones super Artem Veterem Modistae "Mogensen,
Morten (Martinus de Dacia)".
Dansk biografisk Lexikon. Retrieved...
-
etymological and
encyclopedic dictionary in any non-classical language. The
Modistae or "speculative grammarians" in the 13th
century introduced the notion...
- Hebrew, Spanish, Italian, and German.
Their work is
influenced by the
Modistae Grammar of
Thomas of Erfurt, and
later grammars and
textbooks aut****d...
-
underlying all
languages were
published in the
Middle Ages,
especially by the
Modistae school. At the time,
Latin was the
model language of linguistics, although...
-
Grammars of the
Middle Ages: The
Doctrine of the
partes orationis of the
Modistae, Mouton: The Hague, 1971.[ISBN missing] John Marenbon,
Later Medieval Philosophy...