Results 21 to 30 of about 99 (83)

Camilla's traces: Movement as an analytical key to literary history

open access: yesOrbis Litterarum, Volume 79, Issue 5, Page 405-422, October 2024.
Abstract In this article, we develop a framework for the analysis of ‘movement’ in literary texts. We focus on characters, translation and transmission, thereby going beyond, on the one hand, a stylistic analysis of individual passages, and, on the other hand, the linear enchainment of scenes and summaries underlying much of the narratological ...
Eva von Contzen, Karin Kukkonen
wiley   +1 more source

Ethnic Groups and Language Contact in Lycia (I): the 'Maritime Interface'

open access: yes, 2020
International audienceThe 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. Following a brief sketch of
Oreshko, Rostislav
core   +1 more source

Anatolian

open access: yes, 2022
After giving a concise overview of all members of the Anatolian language family, this chapter offers an in-depth discussion of the family’s phylolinguistic make-up.
Kloekhorst, A.
core   +1 more source

Remarques sur la détermination du nom entre lycien et grec d’Asie Mineure. [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
The absence of the definite article in Greek inscriptions from Lycia is among the evidence of linguistic contact between Lycian and Greek due to interference with Lycian which is a no-article language (like the rest of the Anatolian languages).
Stella Merlin
core  

Indo-European origins of Anatolian morphology and semantics: innovations and archaisms in Hittite, Luwian and Lycian

open access: yes, 2021
Attested in cuneiform, hieroglyphic and alphabetic texts dating to the first two millennia BCE, the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family is intriguing already by itself.
Norbruis, S.
core  

Linguistic strategies in filiation formulas: data from Lycian-Greek bilingual texts

open access: yes, 2019
Among nearly 200 Lycian inscriptions, a small corpus of Lycian-Greek bilinguals can be singled out that provides several clues on the Lycian cultural environment during the 1st millennium BC.
Valerio Pisaniello, Stella Merlin
core   +1 more source

Greckie wyrazy βόρατον, βράθυ, βουρί jako przykłady zapożyczenia wielokrotnego

open access: yes, 2023
The paper discusses three Ancient Greek appellatives βόρατον, βράθυ, βουρί denoting conifers from the Cupressaceae family and demonstrates a common Semitic origin of these dendronyms. They should be treated as examples of multiple borrowing, the ultimate
Kaczyńska, Elwira
core   +1 more source

Beiträge zur kleinasiatischen Münzkunde und Geschichte 6-9

open access: yesGephyra, 2009
The first chapter discusses in detail the main type of Imperial coinage minted by the Pisidian city of Selge. This type is shown to depict the city's principal sanctuary of Zeus and Heracles and not a styrax press as Suzanne Amigues recently tried to ...
Johannes Nollé
doaj  

Le statut du lycien et du grec dans les inscriptions de Lycie

open access: yes, 2021
Lycian remained the main communication language as well as the language of the local power. Greek, attested in Lycia from the 5th century BC onwards, first appears to be inseparable from the poetic genre, which was used by Lycian dynasts in public ...
Réveilhac, Florian
core  

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