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Messages 30419 - 30448 of 71222   Newest  |  < Newer  |  Older >  |  Oldest
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30448 enlil@...
glengordon01 Send Email
Feb 1, 2004
10:27 pm
... 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 Send Email
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... Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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... Send Email
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... Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email 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 Send Email Feb 1, 2004
2:50 pm
... <stumbrs> 'aurochs&#39;? 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 Send Email 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 Send Email 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 Send Email 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 Send Email 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 Send Email 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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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:j&#39;dropan/ /T/...
30426 Brent J. Ermlick
bjermlick Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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... Send Email
Feb 1, 2004
8:48 am
... to ... Does he mention Lith. <stum~bras>, Latv. dial. <stumbrs> 'aurochs&#39;? A borrowing from Slavic would neatly explain <st-> ([#zd-] would be ...
30421 P&G
petegray Send Email
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 Send Email
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 Send Email
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 ...
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