Results 21 to 30 of about 3,000,225 (126)
Ethnic Groups and Language Contact in Lycia (I): the ‘Maritime Interface’
The paper offers an overview of the ethnolinguistic and sociolinguistic contact in Lycia in the Late Bronze and the Early Iron Age (ca. 1400–330 BC) resulting from the sea-borne connections of the region.
Rostislav Oreshko
semanticscholar +1 more source
Mapping the Linguistic Landscapes of Mesopotamia [PDF]
Though Ancient Near Eastern Studies has increasingly paidattention to language contact and areal linguistics in recentyears, there have so far been but few systematic attempts atplacing the relevant languages on a map.
Hess, Christian W.
core +1 more source
Allusion and ekphrasis in Winckelmann's Paris description of the Apollo Belvedere [PDF]
As Vout (2006) has recently reminded us in this journal, Johann Joachim Winckelmann'sHistory of the art of antiquity (Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums, 1st ed. 1764) is widely considered to be a foundational text in the history of art.
Harloe, Katherine
core +1 more source
On the Reading and Interpretation of the Two Longer Sidetic Inscriptions S I.2.1 and S I.2.5
– In the 1980s I treated the shorter but bilingual Sidetic (= from Side in Pamphylia) inscriptions (3rd to 2nd century BC). This led to my analysis of the signary as a combination of signs originating from the Phoenician alphabet and Cypro-Minoan ...
F. Woudhuizen
semanticscholar +1 more source
Proto-Anatolian as a mora-based language1 [PDF]
It is not easy by any means to obtain prosodic information from documents written in ancient languages because it is not usually recorded therein. But the techniques of philology and linguistics sometimes enable us to derive prosodic evidence from ...
Yoshida, Kazuhiko
core +1 more source
The Iliad’s big swoon: a case of innovation within the epic tradition [PDF]
In book 5 of the Iliad Sarpedon suffers so greatly from a wound that his ‘‘ψυχή leaves him’. Rather than dying, however, Sarpedon lives to fight another day.
Aceti C. +14 more
core +1 more source
Sounding out Homer : Christopher Logue's acoustic Homer [PDF]
This article presents a case study on sound effects in Christopher Logue's adaptation of Homer's Iliad, a project that began when Logue adapted Achilles' fight with the river Scamander from book 21 of the Iliad for BBC radio in 1959.
Greenwood, Emily
core +2 more sources
Studi linguistici in onore di Roberto Gusmani. 3 vols. A cura di Raffaella Bombi, Guido Cifoletti, Fabiana Fusco, Lucia Innocente, Vincenzo Orioles. XLVI, VIII, VIII, 1866 pp. Alessandria, Edizioni dell’Orso, 2006.
Károly, Krisztina +4 more
core +1 more source
In this short text, I examine the usage of the Lycian word tabahaza, highlight its possible Anatolian cognates, such as the Hittite nēpiš- ‘heaven’ and the Cuneiform Luwian tappaš- ‘id.’, analyze and address the problems arising from this connection ...
Marcel Nowakowski
semanticscholar +1 more source

