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E-raamat: Oscan in the Greek Alphabet

(Peterhouse, Cambridge)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Classical Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316481950
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Classical Studies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Feb-2016
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781316481950

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"Oscan was spoken in Southern Italy in the second half of the first millennium BC. Here, for the first time, all the evidence for the spelling of Oscan in the Greek alphabet is collected and examined. Understanding the orthography of these inscriptions has far-reaching implications for the historical phonology and morphology of Oscan and the Italic languages (for example providing unique evidence for the reconstruction of the genitive plural). A striking discovery is the lack of a standardised orthography for Oscan in the Greek alphabet, which seriously problematises attempts to date inscriptions by assuming the consistent chronological development of spelling features. There are also intriguing insights into the linguistic situation in South Italy. Rather than a separate community of Oscan-speakers who had adopted and subsequently adapted the Greek alphabet in isolation, we should posit groups who were in touch with contemporary developments in Greek orthography due to widespread Greek-Oscan bilingualism"--

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By examining Greek-alphabet Oscan inscriptions, this book shines light on the linguistics, bilingualism and epigraphy of ancient Southern Italy.
List of tables and figure
vii
Acknowledgements ix
Conventions and readings xi
List of abbreviations
xiii
1 Introduction
1(25)
Oscan and its alphabets
1(4)
The linguistic situation of south Italy
5(3)
Oscan phonology and morphology
8(2)
Dating inscriptions
10(9)
Oscan or Greek? Defining the corpus
19(7)
2 Vowels
26(70)
Introduction
26(1)
Identifying vowels
27(3)
Lejeune's theory
30(14)
Data and analysis
44(35)
Conclusion
79(17)
3 Consonants
96(40)
Introduction
96(1)
Letter shapes of <h>: dating
96(2)
The spelling of /f/
98(7)
The value and sources of <ζ>
105(7)
Word-internal *-Ci- sequences
112(17)
Nasals before another consonant
129(4)
Final -τ for -δ
133(2)
Conclusion
135(1)
4 Influence from the Oscan alphabet
136(31)
Introduction
136(1)
The Messina inscriptions
137(4)
The use of <πσ> for /ps/ and <κσ> for /ks/
141(3)
Diphthongs ending in <F>
144(3)
Use of <h>
147(9)
Double writing of long vowels
156(3)
Writing of geminate consonants
159(5)
The use of <νγ> for /ng/
164(1)
Conclusion
165(2)
5 Conclusions
167(17)
Orthographic variation and possible explanations
167(8)
Dating of inscriptions on orthographic grounds
175(6)
Phonology
181(2)
Morphology
183(1)
6 Oscan words discussed in this book
184(45)
Introduction
184(2)
Oscan words
186(43)
Bibliography 229(15)
Index of words 244(15)
Index of subjects 259
Nicholas Zair is a Research Associate on the AHRC-funded 'Greek in Italy' project based in the Faculty of Classics at the University of Cambridge. He studied in Oxford before taking up a Research Fellowship at Peterhouse, Cambridge. He has published widely on the historical developments of the orthography, phonology and morphology of the Italic and Celtic languages, and is particularly interested in the effects of language contact. His previous book, The Reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Celtic (2012), won the John Rhys prize of the Societas Celtologica Europea.