Linguistic Change and Reconstruction MethodologyPhilip Baldi |
Contents
American Indian languages and principles | 17 |
The role of typology in American Indian historical linguistics | 33 |
Morphosyntax and problems of reconstruction in Yuman | 57 |
Copyright | |
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affricate Afrasian Afroasiatic Akkadian Algonquian Altaic Athabaskan attested Australian Austronesian languages B-ip Berber Blust borrowing Chadic cognate comparative method consonant contrast Cushitic Dempwolff dialects Dixon Egyptian ergative etymologies evidence example Eyak feature final forms genetic genitive glottalized stops grammar Greek guages Hebrew historical linguistics Hokan hypothesis Indo-European Indo-European languages initial innovations Iyanh language families laryngeal lexical marker Mayan Mayan languages medial Middle Korean morphemes morphology nasal nominative non-Pama-Nyungan northern noun Old Japanese Omotic original orthography Pama-Nyungan Pama-Nyungan languages paradigm particle past punctual patrilects pattern person singular phonemes phonological plural prefixes Press pronominal pronouns Proto Proto-Altaic Proto-Austronesian Proto-Indo-European proto-language Proto-Semitic reconstruction reflexes regular root second person semantic Semitic sound change sound correspondences subgrouping suffix syllable syntactic thematic Tlingit typological University variants velar verb stem voiceless vowel vowel length word Z-nd