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INDO - EUROPEAN INITIAL sl JOHN PHELPS This article treats of Indo - European initial sl in relation to initial stl found in some of the derived languages . Since we discuss only the initial position that position will be understood ...
INDO - EUROPEAN INITIAL sl JOHN PHELPS This article treats of Indo - European initial sl in relation to initial stl found in some of the derived languages . Since we discuss only the initial position that position will be understood ...
Seite 76
The author finds ( 140-3 ) a small amount of evidence for his thesis that non - ablauting initial o of the Indo - European languages is due to a laryngeal consonant ( he writes ' , I shall write y ) that survives in Hittite as initial h ...
The author finds ( 140-3 ) a small amount of evidence for his thesis that non - ablauting initial o of the Indo - European languages is due to a laryngeal consonant ( he writes ' , I shall write y ) that survives in Hittite as initial h ...
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All other consonantal phonemes ( aside from the rare ṁ and ý , of which a word later on ) , 32 in number , not only occur as stem initials but as word initials , while ń , rh , and y can only occur as non - initial stem initials .
All other consonantal phonemes ( aside from the rare ṁ and ý , of which a word later on ) , 32 in number , not only occur as stem initials but as word initials , while ń , rh , and y can only occur as non - initial stem initials .
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Inhalt
CONTENTS OF VOLUME | 1 |
E? and EU in Germanic Strong Preterits | 11 |
Celtic Notes | 21 |
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American appears assume become Beow beside breaking cited common compared connection consonant course derived dialects discussion distinction early elements ending English etymology evidence examples existence explained expressed fact final forms French frequent further genitive Germanic gerund give given Goth grade Greek hand historical Hittite indicated Indo-European influence initial interpretation king languages later Latin less linguistic meaning middle nasal noun object occur original passage perhaps person phonetic plural position possible present probably PROFESSOR reason reference relation represented root Sanskrit seems semantic sense short similar Society sound stem stop suffix suggested syllable tion University usual verb voiced vowel word writing þat