Papers in this group
1 - 20 of
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This unpublished draft examines Welsh terminology in early literature to explain the disappearance of the old singular form *Bryth 'Briton'. In the process, some insight is achieved into the historical situation in the early Middle Ages regarding…
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This volume offers a discussion of the phonological and morphological development of Old Irish and its Indo-European origins. The emphasis is on the relative chronology of sound changes and on the development of the verbal system. Special attention…
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Old Cornlsh was the Brlttonlc (Celtic) language spoken in Southwestern England (Cornwall) from the seventh to the thlrteenth centuries A.D. Virtually the only survlvlngrecord is a Vocabularium Cornicum (Cornish Vocabulary) of the twelfth century, a…
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This work is a grammatical compendium of the Celtiberian language, incorporating the data available through 2003. The more relevant phonological and morphological phenomena are reviewed. These demonstrate that Celtiberian is an Indo-European and…
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