BachelorDragon.png

The bachelor programme Celtic Languages and Culture at Utrecht University is under threat.

Bibliography

Kortlandt, Frederik, “Lachmann's law”, in: Theo Venneman (ed.), The new sound of Indo-European: essays in phonological reconstruction. Proceedings of a workshop held during the seventh international conference on historical linguistics held September 9-13, 1985, at the University of Pavia, 41, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1989. 103–105.

  • article in collection
Related publications
General
Kortlandt, Frederik, “Lachmann's law again”, in: Edgar C. Polomé, and Carol F. Justus (eds), Language change and typological variation: in honor of Winfred P. Lehmann on the occasion of his 83rd birthday, 2 vols, 30, 31, Washington, D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man, 1999. Vol. 1: 246–248.
Other editions or printings
Kortlandt, Frederik, Italo-Celtic origins and prehistoric development of the Irish language, Leiden Studies in Indo-European, 14, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2007.  
abstract:
This volume offers a discussion of the phonological and morphological development of Old Irish and its Indo-European origins. The emphasis is on the relative chronology of sound changes and on the development of the verbal system. Special attention is devoted to the origin of absolute and relative verb forms, to the rise of the mutations, to the role of thematic and athematic inflexion types in the formation of present classes, preterit[e]s, subjunctives and futures, and to the development of deponents and passive forms. Other topics include infixed and suffixed pronouns, palatalization of consonants and labialization of vowels, and the role of Continental Celtic in the reconstruction of Proto-Celtic. The final chapter provides a detailed analysis of the Latin and other Italic data which are essential to a reconstruction of Proto-Italo-Celtic. The appendix contains a full reconstruction of the Old Irish verbal paradigms, which renders the subject more easily accessible to a wider audience. The book is of interest to Celticists, Latinists, Indo-Europeanists and other historical linguists.
(source: Publisher)
Subjects and topics
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
August 2011, last updated: September 2018