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

This volume contains an introductory essay, the bibliography of Professor Ringe, and nineteen articles on various aspects of historical linguistics composed by current and former colleagues and students at the University of Pennsylvania and a select number of leading scholars in the field based at i...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Eska, Joseph F. (Editor), Hackstein, Olav (Editor), Kim, Ronald I. (Editor), Mondon, Jean-François (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Palgrave Macmillan 2024, 2024
Edition:1st ed. 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • 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)