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Definition of Stratified language
1. Noun. A language that cannot be used as its own metalanguage.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stratified Language
Literary usage of Stratified language
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1889)
"It represents what in geology we should call a metamorphic stratum, a convulsion
of rational, intelligible, and duly stratified language produced by ..."
2. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1892)
"It represents what in geology we should call a metamorphic stratum, a convulsion
of rational, intelligible, and duly stratified language produced by ..."
3. English Prose: Its Elements, History, and Usage by John Earle (1890)
"... to be derived from the possession of a deeply stratified language. Other advantages
will open to our view as we proceed, when we shall have other ..."
4. The Religion of the Veda: The Ancient Religion of India (from Rig-Veda to by Maurice Bloomfield (1908)
"... v We are further on safe ground in demanding a number of centuries for the
much stratified language, literature, and religion of the Veda. But how many? ..."
5. The Religion of the Veda: The Ancient Religion of India (from Rig-Veda to by Maurice Bloomfield (1908)
"... We are further on safe ground in demanding a number of centuries for the much
stratified language, literature, and religion of the Veda. But how many? ..."