This book is an investigation of how semivowels were realised in Indo-European and in early Greek. It examines the extent to which Indo-European *i and *y were independent phonemes, in what respects their alternation was predictable, and how this situation changed as Indo-European developed into Greek.
This book is an investigation of how semivowels were realised in Indo-European and in early Greek. It examines the extent to which Indo-European *i and *y were independent phonemes, in what respects their alternation was predictable, and how this situation changed as Indo-European developed into Greek.
P. J. Barber is a Departmental Lecturer in Comparative Philology at the University of Oxford. His interests include Indo-European, Greek, and Indo-Iranian phonology, Greek verbal semantics, and contemporary syntactic theory.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Part 1: Evidence for Sievers' Law and the Possibility oh Inheritance 1: Introduction 2: Sievers' Law: Gothic and Vedic 3: Chronology and Inheritance Part II: Greek Nominal Categories 4: Sievers' Law in Greek 5: Evidence from -ye/o Nominals Part III: Verbal Categories 6: Preliminary Considerations 7: Greek -ye/o- Verbs 8: Conclusions Bibliography Index
Preface Part 1: Evidence for Sievers' Law and the Possibility oh Inheritance 1: Introduction 2: Sievers' Law: Gothic and Vedic 3: Chronology and Inheritance Part II: Greek Nominal Categories 4: Sievers' Law in Greek 5: Evidence from -ye/o Nominals Part III: Verbal Categories 6: Preliminary Considerations 7: Greek -ye/o- Verbs 8: Conclusions Bibliography Index
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