notes

  • Volumes in the series will appear on an irregular basis; we are unable to process standing orders.
  • Volume 1 is no longer available for purchase or order. PDF versions of the volume’s articles have been made available and are linked below for on-line viewing or download.
  • This page was last modified on September 9, 2004 .

UCLA INDO-EUROPEAN STUDIES

The Program is pleased to present a series of monographs and collections of papers in Indo-European studies by faculty and students of the UCLA Program in Indo-European Studies.

VOLUME 2

UCLA Indo-European Studies, Vol. 2: Cover

July 2003
edited by Vyacheslav V. Ivanov and Brent Vine

234 pages / ISBN 0-9742653-0-6 / $12.00*

* Price includes postage and handling. .

This work seeks to shed light on the Common Slavic dialect map at its center in Pannonia (located in present-day Hungary) via an investigation of the Pannonian dialect’s loanwords into the Old Hungarian lexicon. A survey of various theories regarding Slavic Pannonia is followed by a short excursus on Old Hungarian phonology and the methodologies employed to identify, and subsequently reconstruct, those Pannonian Slavic loanwords which are used to comprise a Pannonian Slavic sample lexicon. This lexicon is then examined to determine the degree to which it can or cannot be associated with known Common Slavic dialects, with these results then applied to an analysis of the aforementioned theories concerning Slavic Pannonia, the ethnogenesis of the Slavs, and the relationships which obtained between Slavs and Hungarians, and between Slavs and Avars.—R. O. Richards

MONOGRAPH
Ronald O. Richards, Ph.D. (Research Associate, UCLA Program in Indo-European Studies):
The Pannonian Slavic Dialect of the Common Slavic Proto-Language: The View from Old Hungarian

VOLUME 1

UCLA Indo-European Studies, Vol. 1: Cover

July 1999
edited by Vyacheslav V. Ivanov and Brent Vine

331 pages / Out of Print**

This Volume inaugurates what we hope will be an occasional series of such volumes, containing papers and reviews highlighting... some of the research (but, it should be emphasized, only some of the research!) conducted by students and faculty in the UCLA Program of Indo-European Studies over the course of the past two years or so....—from the editors’ foreword

** The original tape-bound version in 5.5" x 8.5" and 8.5" x 11" soft-cover and unbound format are no longer available for purchase or order. PDF versions of the volume’s articles have been made available and are linked below for on-line viewing. The collection can also be downloaded in SIT (2 MB), ZIP (2 MB), or TAR (2 MB) format for viewing off line.

PHONOLOGY
Brent Vine: “Greek ῥίζα ‘root’ and ‘Schwa Secundum’”
MORPHOLOGY
Jay Friedman: “A Lexical Analysis of Simple *-r/n- Heteroclisis in Proto-Indo-European”
Brent Vine: “Latin -īnāre/-īnārī
(MORPHO)SYNTAX
Christopher Wilhelm: “Word Order Change in Umbrian: From Postpositions to Prepositions”
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov: “Indo-European Syntactic Rules and Gothic Morphology”
WURZELN, WÖRTER UND SACHEN
Raimo Anttila: “Aggression and Sustenance: Driving (*ag̑-) and Beating (*gʷʰen-) Symbiosis in (Proto-) Indo-European”
This paper was a preliminary version of Chapter 6 of R. Anttila’s book Greek and Indo-European Etymology in Action: Proto-Indo-European *ag̑- (Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2000).
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov: “Comparative Notes on Hurro-Urartian, Northern Caucasian and Indo-European”
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov: “An Ancient Name for the Lyre”
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov: “Old Novgorodian Nevide, Russian nevidal’ : Greek ἀΐδηλος
Brent Vine: “A Note on the Duenos Inscription”
BOOK REVIEWS
Bengt Löfstedt: “Remarks on a So-Called Encyclopedia of Language” (review of David Crystal, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language, 2nd ed., 1997)
Brent Vine: “Recent Work from St. Petersburg,” I (Classical and Indo-European Linguistics, Celtic Studies)
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov: “Recent Work from St. Petersburg,” II (Balkan Studies, Slavic Linguistics and Ethnolinguistics)