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Algonquian linguistic change and reconstruction

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Chapters in this book

  1. I-IV I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contributors XI
  4. Introduction: The comparative method 1
  5. 1. American Indian Languages
  6. Summary report: American Indian languages and principles of language change 17
  7. The role of typology in American Indian historical linguistics 33
  8. Morphosyntax and problems of reconstruction in Yuman and Hokan 57
  9. Tlingit: A portmanteau language family? 73
  10. Algonquian linguistic change and reconstruction 99
  11. Mayan languages and linguistic change 115
  12. 2. Austronesian Languages
  13. Summary report: Linguistic change and reconstruction methodology in the Austronesian language family 133
  14. The "aberrant" (vs. "exemplary") Melanesian languages 155
  15. The Austronesian monosyllabic root, radical or phonestheme 175
  16. Ergativity east and west 195
  17. Homomeric lexical classification 211
  18. Patterns of sound change in the Austronesian languages 231
  19. 3. Indo-European Languages
  20. Summary report of the Indo-European panel 271
  21. Phonology and morphology at the crossroads 275
  22. Etymologies, equations, and comparanda: Types and values, and criteria for judgment 289
  23. The historical grammar of Greek: A case study in the results of comparative linguistics 305
  24. A survey of the comparative phonology of the so-called "Nostratic" languages 331
  25. A few issues of contemporary Indo-European linguistics 359
  26. Is the "comparative" method general or family-specific? 375
  27. The homomeric argument for a Slavo-Germanic subgroup of Indo-European 385
  28. 4. Australian Languages
  29. Summary report: Linguistic change and reconstruction in the Australian language family 393
  30. Verbal inflection and macro-subgroupings of Australian languages: The search for conjugation markers in non-Pama-Nyungan 403
  31. Social parameters of linguistic change in an unstratified Aboriginal society 419
  32. The significance of pronouns in the history of Australian languages 435
  33. Prenasalization in Pama-Nyungan 451
  34. 5. Altaic Languages
  35. Summary report of the Altaic panel 479
  36. Morphological clues to the relationships of Japanese and Korean 483
  37. A rule of medial *-r- loss in pre-Old Japanese 511
  38. Japanese and what other Altaic languages? 547
  39. 6. Afro-Asiatic Languages
  40. Summary report: Linguistic change and reconstruction in the Afro-Asiatic languages 565
  41. Dialectal variation in Proto-Afroasiatic 577
  42. Re-employment of grammatical morphemes in Chadic: Implications for language history 599
  43. Interpretation of orthographic forms 619
  44. The role of Egyptian within Afroasiatic (/Lislakh) 639
  45. A survey of Omotic grammemes 661
  46. The regularity of sound change: A Semitistic perspective 697
  47. Subject index 723
  48. Language index 733
  49. Author index 745
  50. 753-754 753
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