This article investigates the story of the origin and the expanse of the term caesar in the Indo-European languages. A hypothesis on the non-existence of the diphthongs /ai/ and /au/ in Gothic is used to show that the borrowing into Gothic occurred from Greek and renders the Greek spelling practice. Due to additional facts concerning the monophthongization of the diphthong /ai/ in Greek and Latin it is hypothesized that they might already represent not a diphthong but a single vowel. Counter-evidence is also stated, as the precise way of the borrowing still remains unknown
This paper deals with some particularly interesting o-spellings attested in Latin inscriptions datin...
This paper provides an innovative hermeneutic interpretation of the possible pre-Indo-European origi...
Preprint of an article to appear in Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 18 (2013). Do not quote without ...
This article investigates the story of the origin and the expanse of the term caesar in the Indo-Eur...
International audienceThe Greek lexicon is known for its significant proportion of words lacking a c...
International audienceGreek and Latin have developed from their common Proto-Indo-European (PIE) anc...
The verbal systems of the earliest Indo-European languages are not so congruous with one another as ...
The present article investigates the problem of the etymology and development of the Latin word "vir...
Runic inscriptions on the Continent, excluding Frisia, are commonly treated as representing the prec...
Runic inscriptions on the Continent, excluding Frisia, are commonly treated as representing the prec...
The suffix-iavos was a popular naming element in the Eastern Roman Empire. It is generally understoo...
This paper has a narrow purpose: to show how the Germanic futhark came into being. The intent is to ...
Don Ringe has recently published an article on the Gothic gen.pl. ending-e (2006) which is as peculi...
Don Ringe has recently published an article on the Gothic gen. pl. ending -e (2006) which is as pecu...
This dissertation examines the phenomenon of Proto-Indo-European schwebeablaut (German Schwebeablaut...
This paper deals with some particularly interesting o-spellings attested in Latin inscriptions datin...
This paper provides an innovative hermeneutic interpretation of the possible pre-Indo-European origi...
Preprint of an article to appear in Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 18 (2013). Do not quote without ...
This article investigates the story of the origin and the expanse of the term caesar in the Indo-Eur...
International audienceThe Greek lexicon is known for its significant proportion of words lacking a c...
International audienceGreek and Latin have developed from their common Proto-Indo-European (PIE) anc...
The verbal systems of the earliest Indo-European languages are not so congruous with one another as ...
The present article investigates the problem of the etymology and development of the Latin word "vir...
Runic inscriptions on the Continent, excluding Frisia, are commonly treated as representing the prec...
Runic inscriptions on the Continent, excluding Frisia, are commonly treated as representing the prec...
The suffix-iavos was a popular naming element in the Eastern Roman Empire. It is generally understoo...
This paper has a narrow purpose: to show how the Germanic futhark came into being. The intent is to ...
Don Ringe has recently published an article on the Gothic gen.pl. ending-e (2006) which is as peculi...
Don Ringe has recently published an article on the Gothic gen. pl. ending -e (2006) which is as pecu...
This dissertation examines the phenomenon of Proto-Indo-European schwebeablaut (German Schwebeablaut...
This paper deals with some particularly interesting o-spellings attested in Latin inscriptions datin...
This paper provides an innovative hermeneutic interpretation of the possible pre-Indo-European origi...
Preprint of an article to appear in Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 18 (2013). Do not quote without ...