Fragments of Languages: From ‘Restsprachen’ to Contemporary Endangered Languages: Brill's Studies in Historical Linguistics, cartea 23
Daniele Baglioni, Luca Rigobiancoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 oct 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004694620
ISBN-10: 9004694625
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Historical Linguistics
ISBN-10: 9004694625
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Historical Linguistics
Notă biografică
Daniele Baglioni is Professor of Italian Linguistics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice. His main research interests are Historical Linguistics and Etymology applied to the Italo-Romance area, as well as the study of the diffusion of Italian in the Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean, in contact with Greek, Arabic, Turkish, and other languages.
Luca Rigobianco is Researcher in Linguistics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice. His research falls within the fields of Historical and Indo-European Linguistics and (Digital) Epigraphy, focusing on the fragmentary languages of ancient Italy and adopting a perspective attentive to textual and cultural aspects.
Luca Rigobianco is Researcher in Linguistics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice. His research falls within the fields of Historical and Indo-European Linguistics and (Digital) Epigraphy, focusing on the fragmentary languages of ancient Italy and adopting a perspective attentive to textual and cultural aspects.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Contributors
1 Rethinking Fragmentariness and Reconstruction: An Introduction
Daniele Baglioni and Luca Rigobianco
2 Fragments of Greek in Babylonian
Paola Corò
3 Fragments of ‘Solar Royal Compositions’ in the Pharaonic Tradition: ‘Unterweltsbücher’ and Other Related Texts in the Late Egyptian Versions
Emanuele Ciampini
4 ‘Restsprachen’ in Ancient Anatolia: Direct and Indirect Sources, Transmission, and Reconstruction
Stella Merlin, Valerio Pisaniello and Alfredo Rizza
5 Ancient Greek as a Fragmentary Language: What Is ‘Alexandrian Greek’?
Federico Favi and Olga Tribulato
6 The Fragmentarily Attested Languages of Pre-Roman Italy: Interpreting, Reconstructing, Classifying
Anna Marinetti and Patrizia Solinas
7 ‘Restsprachen’ and Language Contact: Latin, Etruscan, and the Sabellic Languages
Luca Rigobianco
8 Reconstructing a Language from Fragmentary and Discontinuous Records: Andalusi Romance (So-Called ‘Mozarabic’)
Marcello Barbato and Laura Minervini
9 Indirectly Attested Dalmatian Romance Varieties: Survey and Perspectives
Nikola Vuletić
10 What Remains of an Atypical ‘Restsprache’: The Mediterranean Lingua Franca
Daniele Baglioni
11 ‘Restsprecher’ and Hypercharacterizing Informants between Veglia and Capraia
Lorenzo Filipponio
12 On the Translation of the Parable of the Prodigal Son in Mòcheno: Linguistic Analysis and Connection to the Extinct Variety of Vignola
Federica Cognola
13 Semi-Speakers and Data Reliability: The Case of the Cimbrian Variety of Foza
Francesco Zuin
14 Notes on the Morphology and Syntax of a ‘Restsprache in Re’: Istro-Romanian
Michele Loporcaro
Index
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Contributors
1 Rethinking Fragmentariness and Reconstruction: An Introduction
Daniele Baglioni and Luca Rigobianco
2 Fragments of Greek in Babylonian
Paola Corò
3 Fragments of ‘Solar Royal Compositions’ in the Pharaonic Tradition: ‘Unterweltsbücher’ and Other Related Texts in the Late Egyptian Versions
Emanuele Ciampini
4 ‘Restsprachen’ in Ancient Anatolia: Direct and Indirect Sources, Transmission, and Reconstruction
Stella Merlin, Valerio Pisaniello and Alfredo Rizza
5 Ancient Greek as a Fragmentary Language: What Is ‘Alexandrian Greek’?
Federico Favi and Olga Tribulato
6 The Fragmentarily Attested Languages of Pre-Roman Italy: Interpreting, Reconstructing, Classifying
Anna Marinetti and Patrizia Solinas
7 ‘Restsprachen’ and Language Contact: Latin, Etruscan, and the Sabellic Languages
Luca Rigobianco
8 Reconstructing a Language from Fragmentary and Discontinuous Records: Andalusi Romance (So-Called ‘Mozarabic’)
Marcello Barbato and Laura Minervini
9 Indirectly Attested Dalmatian Romance Varieties: Survey and Perspectives
Nikola Vuletić
10 What Remains of an Atypical ‘Restsprache’: The Mediterranean Lingua Franca
Daniele Baglioni
11 ‘Restsprecher’ and Hypercharacterizing Informants between Veglia and Capraia
Lorenzo Filipponio
12 On the Translation of the Parable of the Prodigal Son in Mòcheno: Linguistic Analysis and Connection to the Extinct Variety of Vignola
Federica Cognola
13 Semi-Speakers and Data Reliability: The Case of the Cimbrian Variety of Foza
Francesco Zuin
14 Notes on the Morphology and Syntax of a ‘Restsprache in Re’: Istro-Romanian
Michele Loporcaro
Index