I'm sorry to hear you feel you've been given a cold shoulder on the list... I think that is entirely NOT the case... maybe it's because nobody else on the list...
710
Jay Bowks
jjbowks@...
Sep 1, 1999 7:25 am
Ja! how about "Jason" and "Hyacinth"? eh? ... Jay B. ... From: jdm314@... To: gothic-l@egroups.com Sent: Tuesday, August 31, 1999 2:59 PM Subject:...
711
Tomas Mac an Chrosain
crosan@...
Sep 1, 1999 4:09 pm
Paul: I am a beginner at Gothic also. I went for William Bennett's Introduction to the Gothic Language. I know of no tapes. I think you would have to be...
712
David Salo
dsalo@...
Sep 1, 1999 7:10 pm
... Well, I may be wrong. Old English ceorl (the noun) implies *kerlaz = kairls, but Old Norse karl suggests *karlaz = karls, and I'm not sure which side of...
713
jdm314@...
Sep 1, 1999 7:45 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=712 ... Well, I may be wrong. Old English ceorl (the noun) implies *kerlaz...
714
jdm314@...
Sep 1, 1999 8:04 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=710 ... In any case, Jason is Greek, and would be Ïasôn in Gothic, though...
715
Christian Petersen
ctp@...
Sep 1, 1999 9:00 pm
... Since this is meant to be a question, let me answer briefly: unlikely. As the OT tells us, Jacob and Rachel had a son called Benjamin. It's likely that,...
716
etsasse@...
Sep 1, 1999 10:29 pm
... *kerlaz = ... which ... resources ... said on ... just ... *ger-/*gor-. ... l; ... insertion ... This reminds me of the Runic form of the Germanic word for...
717
jdm314@...
Sep 1, 1999 11:18 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=715 ... An interesting explanation, but one I have never heard (not that...
718
Christian Petersen
ctp@...
Sep 1, 1999 11:39 pm
... WHERE is that attested? This would mean that the originally onomatopoetic "kra-" (with metathesis in Latin 'corax'/'corvus', Greek 'kórax') would've been ...
719
Andrew Howey
AHowey@...
Sep 2, 1999 4:58 am
Hello: I'm no expert, but I had read that "ben" in Hebrew/Jewish names means "son of", like the -son/-sen suffix attached to a lot of Scandinavian names. I ...
720
Andy Schwarz
andyhre@...
Sep 2, 1999 5:17 am
Um, my Oxford Study Edition of the New English Bible, states the following about the birth of Benjamin, son of Rachel and Jacob: "Then with her [Rachel's] last...
721
Tomas Mac an Chrosain
crosan@...
Sep 2, 1999 5:43 am
Concerning James: Apparently, the original Hebrew has Yakov/Yakob. The letter beth may have been a bilabial fricative because modern Hebrew pronunciations ...
722
Tomas Mac an Chrosain
crosan@...
Sep 2, 1999 6:00 am
... ne. Well, were dealing with a Semitic name here. If Benjamin is from b-n y-m-n we have the nasalization of -b- (a bilabial and probably fricative). m is a...
723
jdm314@...
Sep 2, 1999 7:31 am
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=720 ... following ... him ... I thoungt it was Benoni, but I don't have my...
724
Bertil Häggman
bertil.haggman@...
Sep 2, 1999 8:28 am
Enthusiasts concerning all Gothic, Am back after a break to introduce a new book (a Ph.D. dissertation at Odense University, Denmark) Ingemar Nordgren,...
725
David Salo
dsalo@...
Sep 2, 1999 12:11 pm
I think I'll go ahead with this, for a little while at least. I am doubtless going to make some errors, or tread on disputed points of interpretation, but I...
726
jdm314@...
Sep 2, 1999 4:08 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=721 ... your post, but neither do I have anything interesting to say about...
727
Sean Crist
kurisuto@...
Sep 2, 1999 5:15 pm
... It wouldn't be a bad thing if someone wanted to put more of Wright's textbook online, since it has passed into the public domain. I already put the...
728
Thiudans
mcarver@...
Sep 2, 1999 5:34 pm
Thanks for the disclaimer, David. In lieu of that, I will make a couple comments. Just wondering, for the sake of the group, what your evidence is based on...
729
Bertil Häggman
bertil.haggman@...
Sep 2, 1999 6:02 pm
Have to make a few adjustments concerning the Nordgren book. The dissertation does as yet only exist in 25 copies, of which most have been provided for Swedish...
730
jdm314@...
Sep 2, 1999 7:51 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=725 ... I definitely think you are. I've been very impressed with all your ...
731
jdm314@...
Sep 2, 1999 7:59 pm
jdm31-@... wrote: original article:http://www.egroups.com/group/gothic-l/?start=728 ... couple ... This assertion is hardly new. The argument is that...
732
David Salo
dsalo@...
Sep 2, 1999 11:18 pm
1) Strong verbs have four principal parts A) Present. With change of endings, this produces: Infinitive Present Participle (an adjective) Present Indicative ...
733
Neil Fulton
nfulton@...
Sep 3, 1999 9:39 am
... Someone else (sorry, I forgot to make a note of who) has already summarised the basic arguments, but if you want to take it further, the most accessible...
734
etsasse@...
Sep 3, 1999 2:50 pm
... Then how was it I wonder that they were so easily assimiliated all over Europe, plainly small population? ... Wow! So Gõtland in Sweden, Catalonia in...
735
Adan-Pol
adan-pol@...
Sep 3, 1999 3:40 pm
Hi Bertil, Is this paper going to be published in english or german too? Sounds like a lot of new stuff coming out. Cheers, A-Pol...
736
Bertil Häggman
bertil.haggman@...
Sep 3, 1999 3:55 pm
Actually I fail to see the point of the two lines underneath, Could you please develop the "assimilation" theme? ... Fail to see why Catalonia is squeezed in...
737
Bertil Häggman
bertil.haggman@...
Sep 3, 1999 3:59 pm
Is this paper going to be published in english or german too? Sounds like a lot of new stuff coming out. A-Pol, It will first, hopefully, be published in...
738
etsasse@...
Sep 3, 1999 6:00 pm
... Well, do you see any Goths today? Genetically at least you might, but it's I imagine impossible to tell since there were assimilated into other cultures....