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Papers in this group

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  1. This unpublished draft examines Welsh terminology in early literature to explain the disappearance of the old singular form *Bryth 'Briton'.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…
  2. 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…
  3. 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…
  4. 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…