... And why do you feel that there was no /a~o~zero/? ... It seems like your entire basis for seperating *e and *o on the one hand and *a on the other is...
30447
Joao
josimo70
Feb 1, 2004 9:10 pm
I know it's not a Russian name, I'm just asking if it is used by Russians, even rarely. ... From: Sergejus Tarasovas To: cybalist@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday,...
30446
Sergejus Tarasovas
sergejus_tar...
Feb 1, 2004 8:46 pm
... Well, if one defines "a Russian name" as "a name at least once registered on the Russian territory / beared by a Russian-speaking person" -- why not? (By...
30445
Brent J. Ermlick
bjermlick
Feb 1, 2004 8:43 pm
... . . . ... Yes, but is the new evidence that Jens mentioned incompatible with any of the various proposals? I've seen, for instance, a suggestion that the...
30444
Brian M. Scott
bmscotttg
Feb 1, 2004 8:23 pm
... For the most part it's simply a pet form of <Elisabeth> in origin. <Else> does appear as the name of a magic-wielding female in Wolfdietrich, and there's...
30443
Joao
josimo70
Feb 1, 2004 8:22 pm
But I found this name in a checklist of Russian names: Evelina Edit Edita Eleonora Ella El'vira El'za El'mira Emiliya Emma Era Erna Ernestina Esfir' Joao SL ...
30442
Sergejus Tarasovas
sergejus_tar...
Feb 1, 2004 8:03 pm
... Russia? ( Il'za, Ilza ?) No, it isn't. If one had named his daughter <El'za> it would have sounded very excentric. On the other hand, a certain percent of ...
30441
Sergejus Tarasovas
sergejus_tar...
Feb 1, 2004 7:52 pm
... from ... favour ... Thank you for the support (if I get you right). It would be interesting to examine early borrowings from Slavic into Baltic and other...
30440
Joao
josimo70
Feb 1, 2004 7:47 pm
Has the German name Ilsa/Elsa any mythical meaning? Is it used in Russia? ( Il'za, Ilza ?) Joao SL...
30439
Gordon Selway
gordonselway
Feb 1, 2004 6:15 pm
Well, Lewis and Short is 125 years old this year, iirc - my copy is currently inaccessible (as is Munro's commentary on Lucretius), and there is now a new OLD,...
30438
alex
altamix
Feb 1, 2004 4:21 pm
... Hmm. what is funny is that to bind appear here to have some relation with to choise( legare-elligere). To re-choise could be re-elligere. Maybe the ...
30437
Daniel J. Milton
danjmi
Feb 1, 2004 4:09 pm
... became the ... time ... unity with the ... from the ... the Roman ... ********* You may think of re-ligion as something to do with binding, and if so, you...
30436
alex
altamix
Feb 1, 2004 3:27 pm
did the word "religion" appeared just after the Christian faith became the official religion of Roman Empire or is this word mentioned some time before? I...
30435
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 2:54 pm
... of ... lost ... Before anybody else says the same: Well, because the sibilant was here IE *-s-, not a palatal *-k^-. Sorry about that. Jens...
30434
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 2:50 pm
... <stumbrs> 'aurochs39;? No, but I believe the word is precisely another instance of the observed Baltic rendition of a prestage of the Slavic sibilants from ...
30433
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 2:26 pm
... would ... Danish and Greenlandic (which are of course not related) both lack voiced stops, but do have voiced fricatives. In my opinion the insight into...
30432
alexandru_mg3
Feb 1, 2004 1:22 pm
Hello Piotr, Please help me again with some arguments regarding the proposed timeframes presented by you in Albanian (1) and (3) : 1) in Albanian (1) You wrote...
30431
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 1:20 pm
... glottalic hypothesis ... redefined ... I suppose it would affect it very little, for the actual phonetic change must be pre-Proto-Indo-European anyway,...
30430
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 1:09 pm
... Okay, fine. Just curious: What made you change your mind? The relevant arguments were already out in the open. Jens...
30429
elmeras2000
Feb 1, 2004 1:06 pm
... nothing to do ... stumbled ... No, I deliberately looked for it to check if my memory was right. I owe some of my insight to Eric Hamp who used this...
30428
Miguel Carrasquer
mcvwxsnl
Feb 1, 2004 1:04 pm
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 06:37:23 -0500 (EST), "Brent J. Ermlick" ... The various glottalic proposals affect the voicedness and laryngeal settings of the PIE stops....
30427
Piotr Gasiorowski
caraculiambro
Feb 1, 2004 12:36 pm
What about "leave your voice after the tone"? I suggest Læ:f þi:n æ:rende æfter þæ:m swe:gdropan /"læ:f Ti:n "æ:'rende "æft&r Tæ:m "swe:j39;dropan/ /T/...
30426
Brent J. Ermlick
bjermlick
Feb 1, 2004 11:37 am
In article <bvgiko+d6gh@eGroups.com> elmeras2000 <jer@...> wrote: . . . ... Does this evidence of voicedness affect the glottalic hypothesis or would...
30425
P&G
petegray
Feb 1, 2004 10:36 am
... Attic reduplication in the perfect is much easier to explain if we allow HR-e-HR, despite s-est-. I know this is not universally accepted, but something...
30424
P&G
petegray
Feb 1, 2004 10:36 am
... Vox Graeca refers to two grammarians (well, all right, one grammarian and Plato) who describe what seems to be a trilled, alveolar sound. (so not guttural...
30423
Juergen ....
ansezantz
Feb 1, 2004 10:03 am
Anyone know how I can say "Hello, leave your voice (or message) after the tone (or sound). Goodbye" in Old English/Anglo- Saxon? It's for my phone message. ...
30422
Sergejus Tarasovas
sergejus_tar...
Feb 1, 2004 8:48 am
... to ... Does he mention Lith. <stum~bras>, Latv. dial. <stumbrs> 'aurochs39;? A borrowing from Slavic would neatly explain <st-> ([#zd-] would be ...
30421
P&G
petegray
Feb 1, 2004 8:45 am
... Watch English English for the next few years. People under a certain age in most of England already say /?/ for <t>. This is (a) a recent change (b) a ...
30420
P&G
petegray
Feb 1, 2004 8:44 am
... Thanks for the examples. We can quibble over whether this makes /a/ "fully capable" of disappearing. It certainly does not seem to be as regular and ...
30419
P&G
petegray
Feb 1, 2004 8:44 am
... /a/ just is. Whereas /e~o~zero/ correlates with certain grammatical forms (eg /o/ in causatives, nouns). The alternation may have been originally ...