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Rask and essay
As Grimm in the preface to his first edition expressly mentioned this essay of Rask, there is every probability that it inspired his own investigations.
In 1814 the young Dane Rasmus Christian Rask submitted an entry to an essay contest on Icelandic history, in which he concluded that the Germanic languages were ( as we would put it ) in the same language family as Greek, Latin, Slavic, and Lithuanian.

Rask and on
In Grimm's first editions, his Icelandic paradigms are based entirely on Rask's grammar, and in his second edition, he relied almost entirely on Rask for Old English.
Several Avesta manuscripts were collected by Rasmus Rask on a visit to Bombay ( now Mumbai ) in 1820, and it was Rask's examination of the Avestan language that first established that the texts must indeed be the remnants of a much larger literature of sacred texts.
The term Japhetic was also applied by the early linguists ( brothers Grimm, William Jones, Rasmus C. Rask and others ) to what later became known as the Indo-European language group, on the assumption that, if descended from Japheth, the principal languages of Europe would have a common origin, which apart from Uralic, Kartvelian, Pontic, Dagestanian, and Basque, appears to be the case.
Thomsen is honored on a stela set up in central Copenhagen along with three other Danish pioneers of modern linguistics, Rasmus Rask, N. L.
Müller's Turanian theory was based not only on his own extensive research, but also on the works of many other scholars such as Rask, Wilhelm Schott, ‪ Gyarmathi ‬, ‪ Castrén ‬, ‪ Gabelentz ‬ and ‪ Böhtlingk ‬ who had all noted various affinities between these languages.
Rasmus ( Christian ) Rask () ( 22 November 1787, Brændekilde on the Danish island of Funen – 14 November 1832, Copenhagen ) was a Danish scholar and philologist.
In October 1816, Rask left Denmark on a literary expedition financed by the king, to prosecute inquiries into the languages of the East, and collect manuscripts for the university library at Copenhagen.
During the period between his return from the East and his death, Rask published in his native language a Spanish Grammar ( 1824 ), a Frisian Grammar ( 1825 ), an Essay on Danish Orthography ( 1826 ), a Treatise respecting the Ancient Egyptian Chronology and an Italian Grammar ( 1827 ), and the Ancient Jewish Chronology previous to Moses ( 1828 ).
The following off-season, on June 24, 2006, Raycroft was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs for the rights to Finnish goaltending prospect Tuukka Rask.
Rask felt that the orthography should be based on the principle of one sound – one letter.
Ihre was the first scholar to recognize the sound change of the Germanic languages that was later to be elaborated on by Rasmus Christian Rask and Jakob Grimm and now known after the latter as Grimm's law.
With nagging back spasms keeping Fernandez from play shortly after the All-Star Game break, Rask was once again called up to serve as a second goaltender, and on 31 January 2009 he played his first ( and only ) game with the Bruins in the 2008 – 09 season, and earned his first ever NHL shutout, a 1 – 0 home effort against the New York Rangers, with Marc Savard scoring the only Bruins goal.
Not long after the beginning of the 2009 – 10 season, Rask, who had been named the backup goaltender to Thomas, signed a two-year extension to his contract with the Bruins on 5 November 2009 that kept him under contract through the 2011 – 12 season.
On June 28, 2012 Rask resigned with the Boston Bruins on a one-year, $ 3. 5 million dollar deal.
The term Japhetic was also applied by William Jones, Rasmus C. Rask and other pre-Darwinian linguists to what later became known as the Indo-European language group, on the assumption that the principal languages of Europe would have originated with the tribe of Japheth.

Rask and Icelandic
The reputation which Rask thus acquired recommended him to the Arnamagnæan Institution, by which he was employed as editor of the Icelandic Lexicon ( 1814 ) of Björn Halldórsson, which had long remained in manuscript.

Rask and language
A similar reform movement for Danish, which at this time was the written language also in Norway, was led by Rasmus Rask ( 1787 – 1832 ) and his follower Niels Matthias Petersen ( 1791 – 1862 ).
Rask visited Iceland, where he remained from 1813 to 1815, mastering the language and familiarizing himself with the literature, manners, and customs of Iceland.
Preceding the acceptance of the Indo-European language family, these languages were considered to be " Japhetite " by some authors ( e. g. Rasmus Rask in 1815 ; see Indo-European studies ).

Rask and gave
Rask was born two years later than Grimm, but his remarkable precocity gave him something of a head start.

Rask and with
The correspondence of single consonants had been more or less clearly recognized by several of his predecessors including Friedrich von Schlegel, Rasmus Christian Rask and Johan Ihre, the last having established a considerable number of literarum permutationes, such as b for f, with the examples bœra = ferre, befwer = fiber.
Also he has hosted TV-show Songs with Stars with Karin Rask.
Rask returned to Copenhagen in May 1823, bringing a considerable number of Oriental manuscripts, Persian, Zand, Pali, Sinhalese, and others, with which he enriched the collections of the Danish capital.
He was signed after it was learned that Boston Bruins back-up goalie Tuukka Rask would be out 4-6 weeks with a lower abdominal strain.
The roots of the current orthography for Northern Sami were laid by Rasmus Rask who, after discussions with Nils Vibe Stockfleth, published Ræsonneret lappisk sproglære efter den sprogart, som bruges af fjældlapperne i Porsangerfjorden i Finmarken.
Following in the tradition of Rask meant that diacritics were used with some consonants ( č, đ, ŋ, š, ŧ and ž ), which caused data-processing problems before Unicode was introduced.
Rask, who died three and a half years prior to AIDS being recognized by the Centers for Disease Control in June 1981, was one of the first non-Africans ( along with Arvid Noe ) known to have died of AIDS-related causes.
His contract with Boston lapsing after the 2009 season, as the Bruins preferred to proceed with Thomas and Tuukka Rask as their goaltenders, Fernandez became a free agent, but unsigned by any other team, retired from active play, although he made no formal retirement announcement.
Sergeant Rask and furir Tapper who were manning the machinegun was also put to trial since the repositioning had been done with a loaded weapon which was against the Army regulations.
Rask was acquitted while Tapper was found guilty and was sentenced to three days confined arrest with loss of pay.
On 5 May 2007, Rask signed a three-year contract with the Boston Bruins, and was in attendance to observe the Providence Bruins's 2006 – 07 playoff run for the American Hockey League ( AHL )' s Calder Cup championship.
The Providence team did not make it past the second round of the Calder Cup against the Manchester Monarchs, but Rask practiced with the Providence team briefly.
Rask had the best save percentage (. 952 ) among the goalies in pre-season play, followed by teammates Manny Fernandez (. 875 ) and Tim Thomas (. 869 ), and Kevin Regan (. 857 ), but the team decided to go with the two veteran goaltenders, Thomas and Fernandez, for the 2008 – 09 season.
In the 2009-10 regular season, Rask was the only goalie with a goals against average less than 2. 00 and the only goalie with a save percentage over. 930.
In the 2010-11 NHL season, Thomas returned to form, making Rask once again the backup, but he won the Stanley Cup with Boston, becoming only the second Finnish goaltender to do so, after Chicago's Antti Niemi the previous year.

Rask and very
His debt to Rask can be appreciated only by comparing his treatment of Old English in the two editions ; the difference is very great.

Rask and cases
At the time, the doctors treating Rask were at a loss to explain her disease progression, which in retrospect, would come to be seen as one of the first cases of AIDS recorded outside Africa.

Rask and .
Key contributions were made by the Danish scholars Rasmus Rask and Karl Verner and the German scholar Jacob Grimm.
His advances must be attributed mainly to the influence of his contemporary Rasmus Christian Rask.
For example, in the first edition he declines disg, dceges, plural dcegas, without having observed the law of vowel-change pointed out by Rask.
Jacob is recognized for enunciating Grimm's law, the Germanic Sound Shift, that was first observed by the Danish philologist Rasmus Christian Rask.
The only fact that can be adduced in support of the assertion that Grimm wished to deprive Rask of his claims to priority is that he does not expressly mention Rask's results in his second edition.
It is true that a certain bitterness of feeling afterwards sprang up between Grimm and Rask, but this may have well been the fault of the latter, who, impatient of contradiction and irritable in controversy, refused to consider the value of Grimm's views when they involved modification of his own.
* 1787 – Rasmus Christian Rask, Danish linguist ( d. 1823 )
Rask described what he vaguely called " Scythian " languages in 1834, which included Finno-Ugric, Turkic, Samoyedic, Eskimo, Caucasian, Basque and others.
In 1818 Rasmus Christian Rask elaborated the set of correspondences to include other Indo-European languages such as Sanskrit and Greek, and the full range of conconants involved.
Notable SaPKo alumni include Jarmo Myllys, Ville Leino, Tuukka Rask and Hannu Aravirta.
Nonetheless, Rasmus Christian Rask concluded that the texts must indeed be the remnants of a much larger literature, as Pliny the Elder had suggested in his Naturalis Historiae, where he describes one Hermippus of Smyrna having " interpreted two million verses of Zoroaster " in the 3rd century BC.
Verner, whose interest in languages was stimulated by reading about the work of Rasmus Christian Rask, began his university studies in 1864.
After studying for four years at Copenhagen University, under the Danish philologist Rasmus Christian Rask, Thorpe returned to England in 1830.
One of the first such proposals was made by the pioneering Danish linguist Rasmus Rask in 1818, upon noticing similarities between Greenlandic Eskimo and Finnish.

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