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The authors propose a revision of views on a number of central issues of Indo-European studies. Based on findings of typology, they suggest a new analysis of the phonological system of Proto-Indo-European (the ‘Glottalic Theory’); they offer novel assumptions about the relative chronology of changes in PIE vowels and laryngeals. Their conclusions are compared with data from Proto-Kartvelian. In the second part of the book, semantically organized presentation of material from the lexicon is combined with analyses of the use of forms and formulae in a broadly defined cultural context. Again similarities with properties of primarily Kartvelian and Semitic are described , and extended close contacts with these language families are postulated. This necessarily leads to a proposal to place the hypothetical Urheimat of the Indo-Europeans in the region south of the Caucasus.
Buchkauf
Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans 1, Tamaz Gamkrelidze, Vjaceslav V. Ivanov
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1995
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- (Hardcover)
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- Titel
- Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans 1
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- Tamaz Gamkrelidze, Vjaceslav V. Ivanov
- Verlag
- Walter de Gruyter
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1995
- Einband
- Hardcover
- ISBN10
- 3110096463
- ISBN13
- 9783110096460
- Reihe
- Schlagwörter
- Sachbücher, Sozialwissenschaften, Sprachen, Linguistik
- Bewertung
- 4,25 von 5 Sternen
- Beschreibung
- The authors propose a revision of views on a number of central issues of Indo-European studies. Based on findings of typology, they suggest a new analysis of the phonological system of Proto-Indo-European (the ‘Glottalic Theory’); they offer novel assumptions about the relative chronology of changes in PIE vowels and laryngeals. Their conclusions are compared with data from Proto-Kartvelian. In the second part of the book, semantically organized presentation of material from the lexicon is combined with analyses of the use of forms and formulae in a broadly defined cultural context. Again similarities with properties of primarily Kartvelian and Semitic are described , and extended close contacts with these language families are postulated. This necessarily leads to a proposal to place the hypothetical Urheimat of the Indo-Europeans in the region south of the Caucasus.
