Indo-European and Indo-Europeans: PapersGeorge Cardona, Henry M. Hoenigswald, Alfred Senn Twenty-two internationally known linguists, anthropologists, and archaeologists discuss such questions as the original home of the Indo-Europeans, their migration, religiomythic beliefs, and legal customs in the most comprehensive treatment of Indo-European culture in recent times. |
Contents
Foreword | 1 |
ProtoIndoEuropean Trees | 11 |
ANTONIO TOVAR The University of Illinois | 13 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adjective Anatolia appears archaeological Armenian attested Balkans Baltic Balto-Slavic Beaker Beaker cultures Benveniste bétail Black Sea borrowed Bronze Age carbon-14 dates Caucasus Celtic central Europe chariot chronology cognates common comparative connection Corded Ware cultures correspondences Dacia Danube denoting derived dialects Dnieper Dnieper-Donets culture Early Bronze Age Early Helladic east eastern etymology European evidence excavations formation Germanic Gimbutas Greece Greek groups Hittite horse Illyrian Indic Indo Indo-European languages Indo-Iranian innovation Iranian Irish ismmo isoglosses Italic and Celtic Italo-Celtic Kurgan culture late later Latin linguistic meaning Meillet Middle millennium B.C. Mycenaean names Neolithic northern ordinals origin Osco-Umbrian parallel pecunia period phase phonological Pontic pottery probably Proto-Indo-European root seems semantic Slavic steppe suffix suggest superlative syllable Szemerényi theme tion Tisza Toch Tocharian tradition Transylvania tree Vedic verb vowel Vučedol western word