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Mže a hydronyma jejího povodí ve světle etymologie

open access: yesActa Universitatis Carolinae: Philologica
In the article the name of the West Bohemian river Mže and its tributaries are analyzed in etymological perspective. In the first plan their Slavic etymologies are analyzed. In the second plan, possibilities of their pre-Slavic origin are verified.
Václav Blažek
doaj   +1 more source

The spread of the Indo-Europeans [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
The publication of Mallory’s book (1989) has rendered much of what I had to say in the present contribution superfluous. The author presents a carefully argued and very well written account of a balanced view on almost every aspect of the problem ...
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
core  

The Welsh Verbal Noun

open access: yesLanguages
The verbal noun in the modern, currently spoken p-Celtic language Welsh is of a different nature than any other word class known in Standard Average European Languages (SAEs), to which the Insular Celtic tongues do not belong.
Sabine Asmus
doaj   +1 more source

Wales, the Enlightenment and the New British History [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
There is no electronic version of this article.PostprintPeer ...
Kidd, Colin Craig
core  

Prepositional possessive constructions in Celtic Languages and Celtic Englishes [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
Extract: [...] One of the often noted characteristic features of the Celtic languages is the absence of a singular verbal form with the meaning ‘to have’.1 The principal way of expressing possession is through periphrastic constructions with prepositions (such as Irish ag, Scottish Gaelic aig ‘at’; Welsh gan, Breton gant ‘at, with’) and appropriate ...
openaire  

Hittite hi-verbs and the Indo-European perfect [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
In an earlier study (1983) I argued that unlike aorists and athematic presents, Indo-European perfects and thematic presents originally had a dative subject, as in German mir träumt ‘me dreams’ for ich träume ‘I dream’, e.g.
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
core  

Shakespeare’s Scottish play in Scottish Gaelic [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
No abstract ...
Innes, Sim
core  

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