Preliminary Material -- THE SPREAD OF THE INDO-EUROPEANS -- *H2o AND *oH2 -- 1ST SG. MIDDLE *-H2 -- GREEK NUMERALS AND PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN GLOTTALIC CONSONANTS -- GLOTTALIC CONSONANTS IN SINDHI AND PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN -- ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN FINAL SYLLABLES IN TOCHARIAN -- VESTJYSK STØD, ICELANDIC PREASPIRATION, AND PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN GLOTTALIC STOPS -- THE GERMANIC FIRST CLASS OF WEAK VERBS -- THE GERMANIC WEAK PRETERIT -- THE INFLEXION OF THE INDO-EUROPEAN ā-STEMS IN GERMANIC -- OLD HIGH GERMAN UMLAUT -- THE ORIGIN OF THE OLD ENGLISH DIALECTS -- THE OLD NORSE i-UMLAUT -- PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN *s IN ALBANIAN -- ARMENIAN ewł ‘OIL’ -- THE BALTIC WORD FOR ‘IN’ -- MORE ON THE CHRONOLOGY OF CELTIC SOUND CHANGES -- INITIAL LARYNGEALS IN ANATOLIAN -- EIGHT INDO-URALIC VERBS? -- A PARASITOLOGICAL VIEW OF NON-CONSTRUCTIBLE SETS -- REFERENCES -- INDEX. The red thread which runs through this book is a quest for relative chronology of linguistic developments. The probability of a reconstruction can be judged against the background of the transitions which it implies for the linguistic system as a whole. The reconstructions are always bottom-up, never top-down. It follows that the chapters on Germanic can be read without reference to the Indo-European background and that the Indo-Uralic part of the book can be left out of consideration if one does not want to look beyond Proto-Indo-European. The initial chapters of the book offer an introduction to the background and methodology of the reconstructions with a discussion of the spread of the Indo-Europeans, the role of general linguistics in linguistic reconstruction, the nature of mixed languages, the origin of the Goths, the relations between Indo-European, Uralic and Caucasian languages, and the structure and development of Proto-Indo-European. The following chapters deal with the phonology and morphosyntax of Indo-European, Greek, Indo-Iranian and Tocharian. These are followed by a discussion of Germanic phonology, verb classes, verbal and nominal inflexion, and specific issues in English, German and Scandinavian languages. After a short treatment of Albanian, Armenian, Balto-Slavic and Italo-Celtic topics, the volume is concluded with a discussion of Anatolian and Indo-Uralic phonology and morphosyntax. The book is of interest to students of Germanic, Indo-European and historical linguistics
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