The Carthaginian North : a Linguistic and Cultural Study.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam/Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2019.
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Colección: | NOWELE Supplement Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; The Carthaginian North: Semitic influence on early Germanic; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; Acknowledgements; Preface; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1. Lexicon; 2. Morphology: The Germanic strong verbs; 2.1 Functionalization of ablaut; 2.1.1 Ablaut in Proto-Indo-European; 2.1.2 Functionalized ablaut in the Proto-Germanic strong verbs; 2.2 Systematized ablaut in the Proto-Germanic strong verb; 2.3 Uniformization of stem formation in the Germanic strong verbs; 2.4 Reduction of verb categories; 3. Syntax; 3.1 Proto-Indo-European word order
- 3.2 Proto-Germanic word order3.2.1 Proto-Germanic word order: SOV or SVO?; 3.2.2 Proto-Germanic word order: V2; 3.2.3 Proto-Germanic V1; 3.3 Proto-Germanic split word order: V1/V2 vs. V-late; 4. Issues in the oldest Germanic writing system; 5. Summary of explananda in Proto-Germanic; Chapter 2. Theoretical foundations; 1. How we look at contact-induced change; 2. Types of contact-induced change and common outcomes; 2.1 Common outcomes of RL agentivity; 2.2 Common outcomes of SL agentivity; 2.3 Neutralization of agentivity; 3. The reconstruction of contact-induced change
- Chapter 3. Context, location and initial contact setting1. Setting the stage; 2. The first phase: Slow language shift to Punic; 3. The second phase: Koinézation and re-Germanicization; 4. Summary: Towards a time line; Chapter 4. Punic elements in the Proto-Germanic lexicon; 1. PGmc. +fulka- 'division of an army'; 2. PGmc. +flukka- 'flock, company, troop'; 3. West Gmc. +plōg- 'plough'; 4. Gmc. +pleha-/+plega- 'to cultivate'; 5. PGmc. +sibjō- 'sib, extended family, clan, kinfolk'; 6. PGmc. +aþal-/+aþil-/+aþul- 'nobility, noble', +ōþil-/+ōþal- 'inherited landed property'
- 6. PGmc. +aþal-/+aþil-/+aþul- 'nobility, noble', +ōþil-/+ōþal- 'inherited landed property'7. PGmc. +erþō 'earth'; 8. PGmc. +skellingaz / +skillingaz 'shilling'; 9. West Gmc. +paning, +panning, +panding 'penny'; 10. PGmc. +smītan 'to smite', +smiþaz 'smith'; 11. Phoenician loanwords "from everyday life"; 11.1 PGmc. +ebura- 'male pig'; 11.2 PGmc. +krabba- m. 'crab, shrimp'; 12. Possible covert Punic influences in Proto-Germanic; 12.1 Gender of PGmc. +sunnōn f. 'sun' and +mēnōn m. 'moon'; 12.2 Gmc. norþ- adj., adv., noun 'north, north wind'
- Chapter 5. Punic influence in the Germanic verb system: The strong verbs1. The contact situation; 2. Problematic Germanic features and Punic; 2.1 Ablaut marks grammatical categories in Punic; 2.2 Inflectional classes depend on phonological root structure in Punic; 2.3 Predictable present tense stem; 2.4 Temporal opposition in Punic; 3. The transfer; 3.1 Contact-induced change I: the innovations; 3.1.1 Contact-induced changes to the verb categories; 3.1.2 Loss of reduplication in the strong preterit; 3.1.3 Systematization and uniformization of ablaut