Language Change in the Wake of Empire
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Aaron Michael Butts
About this book
It is well documented that one of the primary catalysts of intense language contact is the expansion of empire. This is true not only of recent history, but it is equally applicable to the more remote past. An exemplary case (or better: cases) of this involves Aramaic. Due to the expansions of empires, Aramaic has throughout its long history been in contact with a variety of languages, including Akkadian, Greek, Arabic, and various dialects of Iranian. This books focuses on one particular episode in the long history of Aramaic language contact: the Syriac dialect of Aramaic in contact with Greek.
In this book, Butts presents a new analysis of contact-induced changes in Syriac due to Greek. Several chapters analyze the more than eight-hundred Greek loanwords that occur in Syriac texts from Late Antiquity that were not translated from Greek. Butts also dedicates several chapters to a different category of contact-induced change in which Syriac-speakers replicated inherited Aramaic material on the model of Greek. All of the changes discussed in the book are located within their broader Aramaic context and analyzed through a robust contact linguistic framework.
By focusing on the Syriac language itself, Butts introduces new – and arguably more reliable – evidence for locating Syriac Christianity within its Greco-Roman context. This book, thus, is especially important for the field of Syriac studies. The book also contributes to the fields of contact linguistics and the study of ancient languages more broadly by analyzing in detail various types of contact-induced change over a relatively long period of time.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface and Acknowledgments
xi -
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Abbreviations
xii -
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Transcription / Transliteration
xvii -
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Chapter 1. Introduction
1 - Part 1: Prolegomena
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Chapter 2. The Contact Linguistic Framework
11 -
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Chapter 3. The Sociohistorical Setting
25 - Part 2: Loanwords
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Chapter 4. Greek Loanwords in Syriac: The Methodological Framework
43 -
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Chapter 5. The Phonological Integration of Greek Loanwords in Syriac
64 -
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Chapter 6. The Morphosyntactic Integration of Greek Loanwords in Syriac
97 - Part 3: Grammatical Replication
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Chapter 7. Grammatical Replication: The Methodological Framework
139 -
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Chapter 8. The Syriac Copula ʾiṯaw(hy) Replicated on Greek ἐστίν
153 -
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Chapter 9. The Syriac Conjunctive Particle den Replicated on Greek δέ
174 -
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Chapter 10. Conclusion
195 -
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Appendix 1. Greek Loanwords Inherited in Syriac
212 -
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Appendix 2. Citations for Verbless Clauses
223 -
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Bibliography
226 -
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Index of Authors
264 -
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Index of Biblical Sources
270 -
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Index of Syriac Words
273 -
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Index of Greek Words
279 -
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Index of Subjects
283