The Method Works Studies on Language Change in Honor of Don Ringe /

Podrobná bibliografie
Korporativní autor: SpringerLink (Online service)
Další autoři: Eska, Joseph F. (Editor), Hackstein, Olav (Editor), Kim, Ronald I. (Editor), Mondon, Jean-François (Editor)
Shrnutí:XXXVI, 373 p. 17 illus.
text
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024.
Vydání:1st ed. 2024.
Témata:
On-line přístup:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-48959-4
Médium: Elektronický zdroj Kniha
Obsah:
  • Bibliography of Don Ringe
  • Subgrouping and phylogeny
  • Joseph F. Eska: The Continental Celtic dialect continuum
  • Ronald I. Kim: On the phylogenetic status of East Germanic
  • Tandy Warnow, Steven N. Evans, & Luay Nakhleh: Progress on constructing phylogenetic networds for languages
  • Linguistic reconstruction
  • Jay Jasanoff: Rethinking Stang’s Law, with a note on Gk. πότνια
  • Lionel S. Joseph: The sources of the *-ono- ‘god’ suffix
  • Masato Kobayashi: The final glottal stop of the Kuṛux verb bases
  • Michael Weiss: Very Old Latin
  • Theoretical approaches to language change
  • Olav Hackstein: Iceberg phenomena and synchronic rules
  • Jean-François Mondon & Joseph F. Eska: Forced to FORCE? Remarks on the architecture of the left periphery of Early Irish and absolute/conjunct morphology
  • Augustin Speyer: On the functional superstructure of the Noun Phrase in Indo-European
  • Ann Taylor: Understanding translation effects. Lessons from the Old English Heptateuch
  • Charles Yang: Phonological regularity and breakdown. An account of vowel length leveling in Middle English
  • Indo-European philology and etymology
  • Sara Kimball: Guests. Welcome or not
  • Jared S. Klein: Asyndetic verbal pairs in the Classical Armenian Gospels and their treatment in the other five first millennium CE Indo-European versions
  • H. Craig Melchert: Celt. *meh2-ró- ‘large, great’ versus Gmc. *meh1¬-ró- ‘made known, spoken of’
  • Philomen Probert: ‘Between uneducated and educated, or hot and cold, or bitter and sweet ... there’s a middle point’. Varro and the middle accent
  • Patrick Stiles: Obscured figurae etymologicae and word origins. Two examples involving Gothic
  • Brent Vine: South Oscan κλοπουστ (with an Appendix on [Osco-?]Lat. BVRVS).