Études celtiques. — 2011. — 37. — P. 119-139. The paper presents the authors' joint archaeological and linguistic genetic model according to which the Celtic languages slowly developed from each other in the course of five subsequent prehistorical periods.
Indogermanische Forschungen. Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft. — 2018. — 123. Band. — S. 293-337. Despite more than a century of research, the origin of the Insular Celtic double system of verbal inflection is still debated. In this paper, we defend the thesis that the set of absolute endings originated by the agglutination of a subject clitic to the verb form. This clitic...
PNAS. — 2003. — Vol. 100; no. 15. — pp. 9079–9084. Indo-European is the largest and best-documented language family in the world, yet the reconstruction of the Indo-European tree, first proposed in 1863, has remained controversial. Complications may include ascertainment bias when choosing the linguistic data, and disregard for the wave model of 1872 when attempting to reconstruct...
Working Papers of the Cornell Phonetics Laboratory 1996, vol. 11, pp. 117-155. Grouping Harmony (GH) and the Weight-to-Stress Principle (WSP) (Prince 1990) together predict that stressed elements should tend to lengthen and that unstressed elements should tend to shorten. In addition, it is predicted that in a trochaic system, a sequence (H L) should tend to become (L L), since (L...
Die Sprache. — 2005. — Vol. 45/1-2. — P. 44–67. Revises the facts exposed in K. McCone, Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change, 1996, pp. 61 ff. and argues in favor of the following sequence of rules: 1) analogical replacement of thematic accusative plural ending *-ons by *-ōns, 2) raising of *ō, *ē > *ū, *ı̄, and 3) post-Common Celtic loss of...
Indogermanische Forschungen. Zeitschrift für Indogermanistik und historische Sprachwissenschaft. — 2017. — 122. Band — S. 111-141. A subject analysis of oblique subject-like arguments remains controversial even across modern languages where the available data are not finite: while such arguments are considered syntactic subjects in Icelandic, they have more often been analyzed as...
( = "Documents gaulois et para-gaulois de Cisalpine"). — Études Celtiques. — 1970-1. — T. 12/2. — 357-500. This monograph, originally published as an article in vol. 12 of the journal Études Celtiques, marks the beginning of the modern study of Lepontic, a Continental Celtic language. Lejeune discusses indigenous epigraphic documents of the North-West Cisalpina in pre-Roman...
Sprachwissenschaft. —— 1985. — Vol. 10. — P. 274-346. This paper argues for a version of Kluge's Law in Celtic whereby a sequence -Tn- resulted in a geminate consonant.
Статья. — Celtica 25. — 2007. — p. 143-159. Introduction. Judgements on cat-sections. Baircne. Breoinne. Crúibne. Folum. Glas Nenta. Íach. Meoinne. Rincne. Extracts from Di Astud Chirt 7 Dligid. Distraining of cats and dogs. Compensation for cats and dogs. Cats as pets for children. Exemptions for cats. Miscellaneous references.
Studia celtica et indogermanica: Festschrift für Wolfgang Meid zum 70. Geburtstag. — Ed. by Peter Anreiter and Erzsébet Jerem. — Budapest: Archaeolingua, 1999. — (Archaeolingua, vol. 10). 1 Sg. marcosior 'I would like to ride (a horse)' is a denominative verb derived from Proto-Celtic *marko- 'horse'. The comparative interest of the form is the o-timbre of the stem-vowel;...
Die Sprache. — 2002-2003. — 43. — fasc. 1. — P. 171-211 (Teil 1); Die Sprache. — 2004. — 44. — fasc. 2. — P. 26-69 (Teil 2). Traces of PIE suffix *-mon- in Celtic.
Lewiston; Lampeter: Mellen Press, 2014. — iii + 280 p. — ISBN: 978-0-7734-0055-9 Cormac Anderson, Consonant quality in Old Irish revisited. Aaron Griffith, The decline of the Old Irish deponent. David Stifter, The history of the Old Irish preverb to-.
Kelten am Rhein: Akten des dreizehnten Internationalen Keltologiekongresses, 23. bis 27. Juli 2007 in Bonn. Zweiter Teil: Philologie. Sprachen und Literaturen. — Herausgegeben von Stefan Zimmer. — Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern, 2009. — S. 247–266. The subject of this paper is language contact between the Germanic tribes and the Celts in the time period roughly one...
Akten des Zweiten Deutschen Keltologen-Symposiums (Bonn, 2.-4. April 1997). — Ed. by S. Zimmer, R. Ködderitzsch, A. Wigger. — Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1999. — S. 277-304 This paper discusses the position of Lepontic within Celtic language family.
Études Celtiques. — 1979. — Vol. 16. — P. 191-194. Old Irish saithe, Welsh haid 'swarm of bees' etymologically go back to the root of Lat. satis: even though there is no trace of the idea of satiety in Celtic, the connection can still be upheld via a reconstruction of metaphor "a satιety of bees", compare Gk. μελισσάων ἁδινάων.
Bericht der Römisch-Germanischen Kommission. — 1930 [1931]. — Bd. 20. — S. 147-226. Arbeitsbereich und Gang der Forschung Das Altkeltische und seine Nachbarsprachen. Die Lebensdauer des Festlandkeltischen Die Sichtung des Materials. Mundartliche Verschiedenheiten im Festlandkeltischen Der Vergleich des Festlandkeltischen mit dem Inselkeltischen Wortschatz (mit Wortbildung,...
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