Results 1 to 10 of about 332 (69)
On the Reflection of Unaccented Length and the Short Neo-Acute in Slavic, the kȍkōt Type Lengthening in Štokavian/Čakavian and Other Issues [PDF]
This is the sixth instalment in the discussion between Frederik Kortlandt and the author of this article on several problems of historical Slavic accentology. The paper discusses the reflection of pre- and posttonic length (in accentual paradigm a and c)
Mate Kapović
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Prosody of F. W. Haack’s dictionary [PDF]
The article deals with the notation of prosodic features of Lithuanian words in F. W. Haack’s Lithuanian-German and German-Lithuanian dictionary (1730). First, the place of stress (in some cases also tone) is shown by Haack’s diacritical marks.
Vytautas Rinkevičius
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Shortening, Lengthening, and Reconstruction: Notes on Historical Slavic Accentology [PDF]
The paper is a part of an ongoing discussion on various topics of historical Slavic accentology with Frederik Kortlandt. The topics discussed in the paper are: the reflex of the Proto-Slavic short neo-acute in Kajkavian; the reflex of pretonic and ...
Mate Kapović
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On shortening, lengthening, and accent shifts in Slavic [PDF]
The paper deals with several problems of Slavic historical accentology – pretonic length in the accentual paradigm c (and b) in South and West Slavic, the neo-circumflex phenomenon (including the accent in the genitive plural), the kȍkōt ‘rooster’ type ...
Mate Kapović
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A new interpretation of the syllable tones in Doric Greek
NAUJA DORIEČIŲ PRIEGAIDŽIŲ INTERPRETACIJASantraukaSenosios graikų kalbos doriečių dialekto kirčiavimas, fragmentiškai paliudytas senovės filologų veikaluose ir doriečių poetų papirusuose, skiriasi nuo klasikinės graikų kalbos (Atikos dialekto) kirčiavimo.
Mindaugas Strockis
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In Baltistica 46(1), Miguel Villanueva Svensson presents a defence of the so-called “traditional” view on the development of long vowels in Balto-Slavic, in opposition to the views of the “Leiden school” (see Frederik Kortlandt’s Long vowels in Balto ...
Miguel Carrasquer Vidal
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The origins of Balto-Slavic accentual mobility
Vedic had a restricted tone system which can also be assumed for Proto-Indo-European. Various proposed rules generating the characteristic lateral mobility of Balto-Slavic accentuation are superfluous if one starts from a strict comparative analysis of ...
Frederik Kortlandt
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The aberrant form of the nom. pl. of Balt. active participles (Lith. vedą̃ etc.) has been aptly explained (Cowgill, partly anticipated by Endzelīns) as the intrusion of the old finite 3. pl.
Marek Majer
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Andrej Zaliznjak. Cutting off the unnecessary
This paper offers a polemic linguistic and philological view on the scientific heritage of one of the most prominent linguists of the 20th century, Andrej A.
Zimmerling, Anton V.
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Balto-Slavic accentuation revisited [PDF]
There is every reason to welcome the revised edition (2009) of Thomas Olander’s dissertation (2006), which I have criticized elsewhere (2006). The book is very well written and the author has a broad command of the scholarly literature.
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
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