Time, Tense and Aspect in Early Vedic Grammar
Exploring Inflectional Semantics in the Rigveda
Biographical note
Eystein Dahl, Ph.D. (2008) in Linguistics, University of Oslo, is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the University of Bergen. He has published several articles on various aspects of Vedic and Indo-European semantics, syntax and morphology.
Readership
Researchers in historical semantics and syntax, Vedic philology and linguistics, and comparative Indo-Iranian and Indo-European linguistics, as well as indologists, classical philologists and general linguists.
€123.00$171.00
Nicholas Zair, University of Cambridge
In The Reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Celtic, Nicholas Zair for the first time collects all the words from the Celtic languages which contained a laryngeal, and identifies the regular results of the laryngeals in each phonetic environment.
€128.00$176.00
Emmanuel Dupraz, Université de Rouen
This book describes the semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic features of Sabellian demonstratives. It contains new hypotheses on the epigraphic genres in Republican Italy and a reconstruction of these grammatical items’ Italic origins based on typological principles.
€121.00$168.00
Daniel Petit, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris
The Baltic languages (Lithuanian, Latvian, Old Prussian) are well known for their archaic structure. This book is a survey of some major issues of Baltic linguistics (dialectology, accentual system, neuter gender, verbal system, clitic forms).
€153.00$213.00
Melanie Malzahn, University of Vienna
This book presents a synchronic and diachronic study of the verbal system of the two Tocharian languages together with an index listing attested verbal forms and offering semantic and etymological information. The material is based on philological evaluation and incorporates hitherto unpublished ...
€149.00$207.00
Ilya Yakubovich, University of Chicago
Luvian is the language of Anatolian hieroglyphic inscriptions and a close relative of Hittite. This book reconstructs the ethnic history of the Luvians through sociolinguistic methods with an emphasis on the interpretation of linguistic contacts.
€159.00$221.00
Michael Weiss, Cornell University
Taking an approach that combines philological, linguistic, and ritual analysis, Michael Weiss sheds light on many obscure interpretive cruces and also constructs a coherent theory of the entire ritual performance described on Tables III and IV of the Tabulae Iguvinae.
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