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IntroductionLanguage AbbreviationsMIGRATION AND LANGUAGE CONTACT:J.P. Mallory: Indo-Europeans and the Steppelands: The Model of Language ShiftPetri Kallio: Prehistoric Contacts between Indo-European and UralicIDEOLOGY AND MYTHOLOGY:Paul-Louis van Berg and Marc Vander Linden: Ctesias? Assyriaka: Indo-European and Mesopotamian Royal IdeologiesEdwin D. Floyd: Who Killed Patroklos? Expressing the Inexpressible through an Inherited FormulaArwen Lee Hogan: The Modesty of OdysseusDean Miller: Theseus and the Fourth FunctionLANGUAGE: TYPOLOGY, ETYMOLOGY AND GRAMMATOLOGY:Andrii Danylenko: The East Slavic `HAVE?: Revising a Developmental ScenarioAnatoly Liberman: English Ivy and German Epheu in Their Germanic and Indo-European ContextPaul B. Harvey, Jr. and Philip H. Baldi: Populus: A Reevaluation.
IntroductionLanguage AbbreviationsStephanie Jamison: On Translating the Rig Veda?Three questionsJorma Koivulehto: Finno Ugric Reflexes of North West Indo European and Early Stages of Indo IranianOlga Petrova: Grimm's Law in Optimality TheoryJoshua T. Katz: Evening Dress?The Metaphorical Background of Latin uesper and Greek esperoVMartin E. Huld: Reinventing the Wheel'the Technology of Transport and Indo European ExpansionsKristin M. Reichardt: Curse Formulae in Hittite and Hieroglyphic LuwianIlya Yakubovich: Laryngeals from Velars in Hittite?A Triple Headed ArgumentDavid Atkins: An Alternative Principle of Succession in the Hittite MonarchyChristopher Wilhelm: On the Possible Origins of the PhilistinesSandra Olsen: Reflections of Ritual Behavior at Botai, KazakhstanJohn Leavitt: The Cow of Plenty in Indo Iranian and Celtic MythBetsy McCall: Metathesis, Deletion, Dissimilallon and Consonant Ordering in Proto GreekJens Elmeg'rd Rasmussen: The Growth of IE Ablaut?Contrastive Accent and V'ddhiHarold Koch: Order and Disorder in the Reconstruction of the Ablaut Pattern of Athematic Verbs in Proto Indo EuropeanCarol F. Justus: The Age of Indo European Present R Person EndingsAlexander Nicholaev: PIE Ergativity and the Genitive in * osyoAnatoly Liberman: Pseudolaryngeals (Glottal Stops) and the Twilight of Distinctive Voice in GermanicVycheslav V. Ivanov: Early Slavic/Indo Iranian Lexical ContactsIndex
This book presents the most comprehensive coverage of the field of Indo-European Linguistics in a century, focusing on the entire Indo-European family and treating each major branch and most minor languages. The collaborative work of 120 scholars from 22 countries, Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics combines the exhaustive coverage of an encyclopedia with the in-depth treatment of individual monographic studies.
With text in English & German, this book contains papers from the XVI International Conference on Historical Linguistics held at the University of Copenhagen.
This book offers a comprehensive introduction to Proto-Indo-European, Balto-Slavic and Proto-Slavic accentology; a branch of diachronic linguistics dealing with the development of syllable stress, intonation, and quantity at the word level. Of particular interest in the book is its detailed summary of the major approaches and solutions to accentology of the last thirty years. Furthermore, the book provides a comprehensive overview of the current state of research on accentuation of the Indo-European proto-language and the accentuation of Balto-Slavic languages. Such research is integral to our knowledge of how accentual patterns developed from the reconstructed proto-language to the modern Indo-European languages.
Studies in the History of the English Language II: Unfolding Conversations contains selected papers from the SHEL-2 conference held at the University of Washington in Spring 2002. In the volume, scholars from North America and Europe address a broad spectrum of research topics in historical English linguistics, including new theories/methods such as Optimality Theory and corpus linguistics, and traditional fields such as phonology and syntax. In each of the four sections - Philology and linguistics; Corpus- and text-based studies; Constraint-based studies; Dialectology - a key article provides the focal point for a discussion between leading scholars, who respond directly to each other's arguments within the volume. In Section 1, Donka Minkova and Lesley Milroy explore the possibilities of historical sociolinguistics as part of a discussion of the distinction between philology and linguistics. In Section 2, Susan M. Fitzmaurice and Erik Smitterberg provide new research findings on the history and usage of progressive constructions. In Section 3, Geoffrey Russom and Robert D. Fulk reanalyze the development of Middle English alliterative meter. In Section 4, Michael Montgomery, Connie Eble, and Guy Bailey interpret new historical evidence of the pen/pin merger in Southern American English. The remaining articles address equally salient problems and possibilities within the field of historical English linguistics. The volume spans topics and time periods from Proto-Germanic sound change to twenty-first century dialect variation, and methodologies from painstaking philological work with written texts to high-speed data gathering in computerized corpora. As a whole, the volume captures an ongoing conversation at the heart of historical English linguistics: the question of evidence and historical reconstruction.
This is the fullest account ever published of Latin suffixes in English. It explores the rich variety of English words formed by the addition of one or more Latin suffixes, such as ial, -able, -ability, -ible, and -id. It traces the histories of over 3,000 words and reveals the range of derivational patterns in Indo-European, Latin, and English. It makes an important contribution to the history of English and Latin morphology and etymology, as well as to the history of suffixal derivation in Indo-European.
Sound leaves no ruins and no residues, even though it is experienced constantly. It is ubiquitous but fleeting. Even silence has sound, even absence resonates. Sound and the Ancient Senses aims to hear the lost sounds of antiquity, from the sounds of the human body to those of the gods, from the bathhouse to the Forum, from the chirp of a cicada to the music of the spheres. Sound plays so great a role in shaping our environments as to make it a crucial sounding board for thinking about space and ecology, emotions and experience, mortality and the divine, orality and textuality, and the self and its connection to others. From antiquity to the present day, poets and philosophers have strained to hear the ways that sounds structure our world and identities. This volume looks at theories and practices of hearing and producing sounds in ritual contexts, medicine, mourning, music, poetry, drama, erotics, philosophy, rhetoric, linguistics, vocality, and on the page, and shows how ancient ideas of sound still shape how and what we hear today. As the first comprehensive introduction to the soundscapes of antiquity, this volume makes a significant contribution to the burgeoning fields of sound and voice studies and is the final volume of the series, The Senses in Antiquity.
Table of Contents / Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface / Vorwort Jose Cajot: Phonologisch bedingter Polytonieverlust - eine tonlose Enklave sudlich von Maastricht Inger EiskjAer: Glottal stop (stod, parasitic plosive) and (distinctive) tonal accents in the Danish dialects Jan Goossens: Historische und geographische Randbedingungen des Genker Tonakzentsystems Ronny Keulen: Eine vergleichende diachrone Untersuchung zum Tonverlust sudwestlich der Stadt Maastricht Gjert Kristoffersen: Is 1 always less than 2 in Norwegian tonal accents? Anatoly Liberman: Epenthetic consonants and the accentuation of words with old closed vowels in Low German, Dutch, and Dansih dialects Anna Peetz: Die Tonakzente in der Mundart von Beuren/Hochwald Harry Perridon: On the origin of the Scandinavian word accents Jorg Peters: The Cologne word accent revisited Jurgen Erich Schmidt / Hermann J. Kunzel: Das Ratsel lost sich: Phonetik und sprachhistorische Genese der Tonakzente im Regelumkehrgebiet (Regel B) List of maps / Kartenverzeichnis Index of geographical names / Index der geographischen Namen Index of languages / Index der Sprachen