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Reconstructing the Proto-Indo-Europeans

1997
Abstract There is only one route to the reconstruction of Indo-European culture that offers any hope of reliability and that is language. Although we might compare cultural traditions, behaviour, or material culture among the different Indo-European groups, this exercise would be a very uncertain plunge into comparative ethnography or ...
J P Mallory, D Q Adams
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Proto-Indo-European phonology

2017
The chapter presents the reconstruction of Proto- Indo-European phonemes, accent, phonological rules and phonotactics.
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Proto-Indo-European kinship terms

2014
Kinship terms, along with names of animals and plants, anatomical parts, natural phenomena and numbers, belong to the most conservative vocabulary of the Indo-European languages. This lexical group does not only reflect archaic patterns of word formation but also the life, mentality, and the social structure of PIE tribes.
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Moods In Proto-Indo-European

1995
Abstract History of the Moods. It is common to say that the mood markers of PIE are limited to finite forms, and occur between the verb stem and the person ending. However, the use of moods in the Rigveda is constrained in ways not compassed in that statement: in the earliest Indic, subjunctives formed to secondary stems (frequentatives,
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Reconstructing Proto-Indo-European categories

2015
Starting from the analysis of constructions employed to express the category of reflexive in Hittite, encoded both by the verbal ending set of the middle and by the pronominal marker -za with both active and middle verbal forms, we present a typological parallelism with the Baltic languages that has consistently developed, from a pronominal, a verbal ...
COTTICELLI, Paola, Rizza, Alfredo
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