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Ancient Indo-European languages between linguistics and philology : contact, variation, and reconstruction / edited by Michele Bianconi, Marta Capano, Domenica Romagno, Francesco Rovai.

Contributor(s): Bianconi, Michele [edt] | Capano, Marta [edt] | Romagno, Domenica [edt] | Roval, Francesco [edt].
Material type: TextTextSeries: Brill's studies in historical linguistics: v. 18.Description: xvi, 314 str. : ilustr., karte ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9789004508811; 9004508813.Subject(s): indoeuropski jezici | indoeuropeistika zbornik s konferencije | indoeuropska filologija | i.e. rekonstrukcija | izumrli jeziciSummary: "Studying the Indo-European languages means having a privileged viewpoint on diachronic language change, because of their relative wealth of documentation, which spans over more than three millennia with almost no interruption, and their cultural position that they have enjoyed in human history. The chapters in this volume investigate case-studies in several ancient Indo-European languages (Ancient Greek, Latin, Hittite, Luwian, Sanskrit, Avestan, Old Persian, Armenian, Albanian) through the lenses of contact, variation, and reconstruction, in an interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary way. This reveals at the same time the multiplicity and the unity of our discipline(s), both by showing what kind of results the adoption of modern theories on "old" material can yield, and by underlining the centrality and complexity of the text in any research related to ancient languages"--
List(s) this item appears in: Bilten prinova - lingvistika 2023
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Knjiga Knjiga Knjižnica FFZG
4. kat, lingvistika
Lingvistika EB09 ANC (Browse shelf) Korištenje u čitaonici 1305299598
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"Studying the Indo-European languages means having a privileged viewpoint on diachronic language change, because of their relative wealth of documentation, which spans over more than three millennia with almost no interruption, and their cultural position that they have enjoyed in human history. The chapters in this volume investigate case-studies in several ancient Indo-European languages (Ancient Greek, Latin, Hittite, Luwian, Sanskrit, Avestan, Old Persian, Armenian, Albanian) through the lenses of contact, variation, and reconstruction, in an interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary way. This reveals at the same time the multiplicity and the unity of our discipline(s), both by showing what kind of results the adoption of modern theories on "old" material can yield, and by underlining the centrality and complexity of the text in any research related to ancient languages"--

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