The paper aims at reconstructing some steps of the evolution of a key concept of traditional Indian grammar, namely that of linguistic zero, focusing on the earlier authors of the paṇinian tradition, namely Patanjali (II B.C.) and Bhartrhari (V A.D.). The Ancient Indian descriptive method of this zero is compared with some relevant Linguistic theories
The question of the relation of the first available Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam to various Sanskrit gr...
“We know that Middle Indian (Middle Indo-Aryan) makes its appearance in epigraphy prior to Sanskrit:...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...
The paper aims at reconstructing some steps of the evolution of a key concept of traditional Indian ...
The paper aims at reconstructing some steps of the evolution of a key concept of traditional Indian...
This PhD Thesis focuses on the model of Zero-Morphology proposed by Panini as a specific case of the...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to describe and explain the way in which grammarians ...
The focus of the present paper is on the opposition between linguistic phenomena labelled as vacanik...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
In modern linguistics it is common to analyse bahuvrīhis as derived from an endocentric compound to ...
The collected essays in this book are the result of a series of workshops held at the University of ...
The analytic device called "zero" in modem linguistics has its origin in Panini's analysis of Sanskr...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
The reflection on whether and on what grounds the absence of a sign turns out to be as just signific...
The question of the relation of the first available Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam to various Sanskrit gr...
“We know that Middle Indian (Middle Indo-Aryan) makes its appearance in epigraphy prior to Sanskrit:...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...
The paper aims at reconstructing some steps of the evolution of a key concept of traditional Indian ...
The paper aims at reconstructing some steps of the evolution of a key concept of traditional Indian...
This PhD Thesis focuses on the model of Zero-Morphology proposed by Panini as a specific case of the...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to describe and explain the way in which grammarians ...
The focus of the present paper is on the opposition between linguistic phenomena labelled as vacanik...
International audienceIndian linguistic thought begins around the 8 th-6 th centuries BC with the co...
There are certain discrepancies between the forms and constructions prescribed by Pāṇinian grammaria...
In modern linguistics it is common to analyse bahuvrīhis as derived from an endocentric compound to ...
The collected essays in this book are the result of a series of workshops held at the University of ...
The analytic device called "zero" in modem linguistics has its origin in Panini's analysis of Sanskr...
Indian grammarians knew of linguistic variation: in Pāṇini's Aṣṭhādyāyī we already find rules to des...
The reflection on whether and on what grounds the absence of a sign turns out to be as just signific...
The question of the relation of the first available Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam to various Sanskrit gr...
“We know that Middle Indian (Middle Indo-Aryan) makes its appearance in epigraphy prior to Sanskrit:...
This paper focuses on the evolution of the Old Indo-Aryan reciprocal pronoun anyo'nya- as well as so...