This 18369 publication analyses the classical literary language of Java in the context of Sanskrit and several Pacific languages.This monumental work by the German linguist Wilhelm von Humboldt (17671835), published posthumously in 18369, analyses the classical literary language of Java. Volume 2 describes the roots and grammatical structures of Kawi on the basis of textual sources, and considers its relationship with other languages of the region.This monumental work by the German linguist Wilhelm von Humboldt (17671835), published posthumously in 18369, analyses the classical literary language of Java. Volume 2 describes the roots and grammatical structures of Kawi on the basis of textual sources, and considers its relationship with other languages of the region.Wilhelm von Humboldt (17671835) was a German philologist, diplomat and philosopher. While Minister of Education he was responsible for reforming the Prussian education system. His pioneering achievements in linguistics influenced many later scholars including Chomsky. Written in 18303, this monumental three-volume study of Kawi, a traditional formal and literary language of Java belonging to the Austronesian language family, was published posthumously in 18369. The manuscript was prepared for the press by J. K. E. Buschmann, a prot?g? of Humboldt's friend and colleague Bopp, whose work is also reissued in this series. Humboldt considered Kawi, which includes many Sanskrit loan-words, to be the common ancestor of all the Malayo-Polynesian languages, though this view is no longer accepted. Volume 2 analyses the roots and grammatical structures of Kawi as attested in religious texts and heroic epics, and provides cross-linguistic data to demonstrate its relationship with other languages of the region.Vorwort; Zweites Buch. ?ber die Kawi-Sprache; Drittes Buch. ?ber den Malayischen Sprachstamm: Erster Abschnitt. Stammverwandtschaft der Malayischen Sprachen; Zweiter Abschnitt. Betrachtung der einzelnen SlÓ”