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A History of Indo-European Verb Morphology

 | Millersville University, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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ISBN 9789027235886 (Eur) | EUR 105.00
ISBN 9781556191459 (USA) | USD 158.00
 
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This book explores the origin and evolution of important grammatical categories of the Indo-European verb, including the markers of person, tense, number, aspect, and mood. Its central thesis is that many of these markers can be traced to original deictic particles which were incorporated into verbal structures in order to indicate the 'hic and nunc' and various degrees of remoteness from the 'hic and nunc'. The alterations to which these deictic elements were subject are viewed here in the context of an Indo-European language very different from Brugmannian Indo-European, many features of which, it is argued, appeared only in the period of dialectal development. This book challenges numerous traditional proposals about the Indo-European verb; all reconstructions contained in it are firmly based on extant data and are consonant with established principles of linguistic change.
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 88] 1992.  viii, 160 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 19 December 2011
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Cited by (16)

Cited by 16 other publications

Corral Esteban, Avelino
2025. A Study of Grammatical Gradience in Relation to the Distributional Properties of Verbal Nouns in Scottish Gaelic. Languages 10:8  pp. 199 ff. DOI logo
Markovikj, Marjan & Zuzana Topolinjska
2022. Formal and semantic derivation of the Proto-Slavic verbal root *met-(*mot-/*mǫt-) in the Macedonian and Polish languages. Juznoslovenski filolog 78:2  pp. 159 ff. DOI logo
Alcocer Urueta, Ricardo
2020. La teoría unificada de las oraciones copulativas propuesta por Andrea Moro. Diánoia 65:85 DOI logo
Fernández Cuesta, Julia & Christopher Langmuir
2019. Verbal morphology in the Old English gloss to the Durham Collectar. NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution 72:2  pp. 134 ff. DOI logo
Juge, Matthew L.
2019. The Sense That Suppletion Makes: Towards a Semantic Typology on Diachronic Principles. Transactions of the Philological Society 117:3  pp. 390 ff. DOI logo
BARTOLOTTA, ANNAMARIA
2009. Root lexical features and inflectional marking of tense in Proto-Indo-European. Journal of Linguistics 45:3  pp. 505 ff. DOI logo
Shields Jr., Kenneth
2008. Some Comments about Early Germanic Cardinal Direction Words. Historical Linguistics 121:1  pp. 219 ff. DOI logo
Estrada Fernández, Zarina
2005. The Pronominal Form ‐a as a Middle Marker in Pima Bajo. International Journal of American Linguistics 71:3  pp. 277 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
1994. The role of deictic particles in the IE personal pronoun system. <i>WORD</i> 45:3  pp. 307 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
1995. Germanic locative adverbs in *-on-. American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures 7:1  pp. 51 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
1997. Linguistic typology and reconstruction: The animacy hierarchy and its implications for the Indo-European inflectional number category. <i>WORD</i> 48:3  pp. 367 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
1997. The Origin of the Vedic 2nd Sing. Imperative in -SI. Indo-Iranian Journal 40:2  pp. 149 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
1997. The Gothic Genitive Plural in -ēRevisited. American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures 9:2  pp. 239 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
2001. A note on the pronominal origin of the Indo-European first person singular verbal desinence. <i>WORD</i> 52:2  pp. 257 ff. DOI logo
Shields, Kenneth
2009. Typological Assessment of Reconstruction: Did Indo-European Have Inclusive and Exclusive First Person Plural Personal Pronouns?. Lingua Posnaniensis 51:1  pp. 57 ff. DOI logo
Koerner, Konrad & Kofi K. Saah
1992. Publications received/Ouvrages reçus/Eingegangene schriften. Historiographia Linguistica 19:2-3  pp. 429 ff. DOI logo

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