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Multi Nominis Grammaticus

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Thirty internationally recognized scholars celebrate the work of the famous Indo-Europeanist Alan J. Nussbaum. The topics range from Indo-European nominal morphology, especially in the Classical la...
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  • 06 March 2013
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In this volume, thirty internationally recognized scholars have come together to celebrate the work of the famous Indo-Europeanist Alan J. Nussbaum. The topics range widely from Nussbaum's favourite subject of Indo-European nominal morphology, especially in the Classical languages, to the historical grammars of Tocharian, the stylistics of the Rigveda, Aristophanean philology, and much more. Nussbaum's work is honoured with contributions by such renowned experts as Heiner Eichner, Jay Jasanoff, Sergio Neri, Hayden Pelliccia, Richard Thomas, and Michael Weiss. A complete bibliography of Nussbaum's oeuvre is included, and the volume closes with a full word-index.  Some contributions in German.

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Price: £72.00
Pages: 378
Publisher: Beech Stave Press
Imprint: Beech Stave Press
Publication Date: 06 March 2013
ISBN: 9780974792798
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General, Linguistics

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Table of Contents

Preface........................................................................................................................... vii

Bibliography of Alan Nussbaum..................................................................................... ix

List of Contributors....................................................................................................... xi

Todd Clary, Live Life and Die Death: Case Selection of Cognate Accusatives

and Datives in Ancient Greek......................................................................................

Michiel de Vaan, Latin danunt....................................................................................

Heiner Eichner, Zur Herleitung von lateinisch ¯ebrius ‚trunken‘

und s¯obrius ‚nüchtern‘................................................................................................

Joseph F. Eska, In Defense of Celtic /φ/.....................................................................

Margalit Finkelberg, Equivalent Formulae for Zeus

in Their Traditional Context....................................................................................

Benjamin W. Fortson IV, Pre-Italic *-dhi¯e (*-dhieh1)

versus Pre-Indo-Iranian *-dhi¯oi: Bridging the Gap .................................................

José Luis García Ramón, Lat. Opiter, OHG aftero ‘later’,

PIE *h1op(i)-tero- ‘the one after’ and Related Forms..............................................

Guðrún Þórhallsdóttir, Analogical Changes in the History

of Old Icelandic fela..................................................................................................

Olav Hackstein, Indogermanisch *h1k- u-o-s, *h1ek- u-o-s ‚Pferd, Hengst, Stute’: Genusindifferenz als morphologische Persistenz....................................................

Jay H. Jasanoff, The Tocharian Subjunctive and Preterite in *-a-.........................

Ronald I. Kim, The Indo-European, Anatolian, and Tocharian “Secondary”

Cases in Typological Perspective..............................................................................

Jared S. Klein, Fashioning a Coda: Repetition of Clitics

and Clitic-like Elements in the Rigveda.................................................................

Alexander Lubotsky, The Vedic Paradigm for ‘water’...........................................

Melanie Malzahn, Cutting around “temós”: Evidence from Tocharian................

  1. Craig Melchert, Hittite “Heteroclite” s-Stems...................................................

Sergio Neri, Zum urindogermanischen Wort für ‚Hand‘.......................................

Birgit Anette Olsen, A Note on Indo-European In-Laws....................................

Holt Parker, Palatalization of Labiovelars in Greek.................................................

Hayden Pelliccia, Aristophanes, Thesmophoriazusae ...........................................

Martin Peters, Send in the Nouns.............................................................................

Georges-Jean Pinault, The Lady (Almost) Vanishes............................................

Jeremy Rau, Notes on State-Oriented Verbal Roots, the Caland System,

and Primary Verb Morphology in Indo-Iranian and Indo-European...................

Elisabeth Rieken, Sekundäre denominale u-Stämme im Hethitischen...................

Don Ringe, An Early “Ingvaeonic” Innovation......................................................

Aaron P. Tate, Verse Segments and Syntactic Templates

in Homeric Philology...............................................................................................

Richard F. Thomas, Thoughts on the Virgilian Hexameter................................

Brent Vine, A Hoarse of a Different Color (Plautus, Poen.  ra¯vi¯o) ......................

Rex E. Wallace, Etruscan Genitives in -a and -al.......................................................

Michael Weiss, Interesting i-Stems in Irish...............................................................

Kazuhiko Yoshida, Lycian χawa- ‘sheep’..................................................................

Index Verborum.............................................................................................................