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Tavet Tat Satyam
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31 December 2016

This volume honours the Indologist and Indo-Europeanist Jared S. Klein with almost three dozen essays ranging over a wealth of Indo-Iranian and other Indo-European topics. Internationally renowned scholars such as Gary Beckman, Bernhard Forssman, Stephanie Jamison, Martin Kummel, Elizabeth Tucker, and Chlodwig Werba have all contributed the fruits of their cutting-edge research as a fitting and lasting tribute to the honorand. Contributions in English and German.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General, Linguistics
Table of Contents
Preface........................................................................................................................................... vii
Bibliography of Jared S. Klein..................................................................................................... ix
List of Contributors..................................................................................................................... xx
Gary Beckman, Ahhijawa und kein Ende: The Battle over Mycenaeans in Anatolia........... 1
Joel P. Brereton, Word Positioning in Rgvedic Poetry......................................................... 13
Jessica DeLisi, A Second Look at First- and Second-person Deictic SuYxes
in Modern Eastern Armenian................................................................................................ 22
Joseph F. Eska, On Pragmatic Information Structuring at Séracourt à Bourges (Cher) and Related Matters...................................................................................................................... 34
Bernhard Forssman, Griechisch bo⁄loµai Ω und proböboula................................................. 45
José Luis García Ramón, Anthroponymica Mycenaea 9: Compound Names in
°me-de, °me-ta and Pylian me-ti-ja-no...................................................................................... 52
José Virgilio García Trabazo, Sobre indio antiguo mrgá- ‘animal salvaje’
y el texto hitita KUB 43.60+ (‘El gran camino del alma’).................................................. 65
Toshifumi Goto¯, vi-le´s/li´s, vi-ris. und die Verstauchung des Opfers ...................................... 76
Dag Trygve Truslew Haug, PIE *kwi-/kwo-: Interrogative, Indefinite or Both?................. 86
Hans Henrich Hock, Pa¯n. ini’s Language: Real or Not? ...................................................... 101
Stephanie W. Jamison, Inter-hymnic Rhetorical Structure in RV I.68–70:
Para¯´sara Sa¯ktya’s Vai´sva¯nara Cycle ....................................................................................... 113
Jay H. JasanoV, Toch. AB a¯kl- ‘learn’ .................................................................................... 123
Brian D. Joseph, Balkan, Indo-European, and Universal Perspectives
on ‘be’ in Albanian................................................................................................................ 130
Götz Keydana, Kausative im Frühvedischen........................................................................ 138
Ronald I. Kim, Studies in Armenian Historical Phonology I:
Aspiration and Spirantization of PIE Voiceless Stops...................................................... 151
Masato Kobayashi, The Adnominal Locative in Indo-Aryan............................................. 168
Martin Joachim Kümmel, *syá- im Indoiranischen: Zahlwort und Demonstrativum?..179
Melanie Malzahn, Vedic a´sáni-: Another Stone from Heaven?.......................................... 19
H. Craig Melchert, Hittite k¯ı(kuit) and Vedic “sá-figé”...................................................... 204
Alan J. Nussbaum, A Note on Latin Syllables and Anaptyxis............................................ 214
Norbert Oettinger, Altindisch Agní- ,Feuergott‘ und hethitisch dAgni/dAkni-................ 228
Birgit Anette Olsen, Zarathustra and the Needle’s Eye of Etymology............................. 236
Georges-Jean Pinault, Reflecting the Divine Mansion: Vedic amáti-.............................. 246
Joseph Rhyne and Andrew Miles Byrd, Stressful Conversions: Internal Derivation within the Compositional Approach..................................................................................................... 258
Elisabeth Rieken, Repetition und Variation in den hethitischen Gebeten....................... 269
Don Ringe, The Nature of the South Greek Dialect Group................................................ 278
Caley Charles Smith, The Kat.hopanis.ad and the Deconstruction of the Fire-Altar....... 284
Olga A. Thomason, Indicating Path: Evidence from New Testament Greek, Gothic, Classical Armenian, and Old Church Slavic...................................................................................... 294
Elizabeth Tucker, Rigvedic Root-accented Neuters in -ana- and Animate Forms in -ana-/-an¯ı-......... 309
Brent Vine, Latin b¯es/bessis ‘two-thirds of an as’...................................................... 324
Michael Weiss, The Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals and the Name of Cilicia
in the Iron Age....................................................................................................................... 331
Chlodwig H. Werba, Ur(indo)arisches im Nu¯rista¯n¯ı: Zur historischen Phonologie
des Indoiranischen................................................................................................................ 341
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Kazuhiko Yoshida, Hittite parhattari Reconsidered........................................................... 360
Index Verborum......................................................................................................................... 369