Frederik Kortlandt: Electronic publications
Electronic publications in pdf
- Pedersen’s law and the rise of distinctive tone in Baltic and Slavic [327e]
- Balto-Slavic acute [324e]
- Rise and fall of vowel length in Slavic [321e]
- Relative chronology [320e]
- The origins of the Slavic aorist [312e]
- The Indo-European k-aorist [302e]
- Slavic i-verbs, imperfect, and jā-stem nouns [301e]
- The inflexion of the Indo-European o-stems in Balto-Slavic [300e]
- Indo-European o-grade presents and the Anatolian hi-conjugation [297e]
- Thematic and athematic present endings in Balto-Slavic and Indo-European [295e]
- The development of vowel length in Slavic [294e]
- Metatony in monosyllables [293e]
- Reconstructing Balto-Slavic and Indo-European [292e]
- The origins of Balto-Slavic accentual mobility [290e]
- Proto-Slavic *j, Van Wijk’s law, and ē-stems [288e]
- Sigmatic and asigmatic long vowel preterit forms [286e]
- Balto-Slavic personal pronouns and their accentuation [284e]
- The early chronology of long vowels in Balto-Slavic [283e]
- Proto-Indo-European glottalic stops: The evidence revisited [282e]
- On Derksen's law and related issues [279e]
- Schleicher's fable [271e]
- An outline of Proto-Indo-European [269e]
- More on the chronology of Celtic sound changes [268e]
- Balto-Slavic accentuation revisited [267e]
- All's well that ends well [264e]
- West Slavic accentuation [262e]
- Indo-Uralic and Altaic revisited [256e]
- Rise and development of Slavic accentual paradigms [255e]
- Balto-Slavic phonological developments [253e]
- Issues in Balto-Slavic accentology [252e]
- C.C. Uhlenbeck on Indo-European, Uralic and Caucasian [247e]
- Russian syntax and semantics [246e]
- For Bernard Comrie [243e]
- Winter's law again [242e]
- Hittite hi-verbs and the Indo-European perfect [241e]
- Gothic gen.pl. -e [240e]
- Accent retraction and tonogenesis [236e]
- Balto-Slavic accentual mobility [234e]
- On the relative chronology of Slavic accentual developments [233e]
- Lithuanian tekéti and related formations [228e]
- Noises and nuisances in Balto-Slavic and Indo-European linguistics [227e]
- Miscellaneous remarks on Balto-Slavic accentuation [226e]
- Holger Pedersen's Études lituaniennes revisited [224e]
- Hittite ammuk 'me' [223e]
- From Serbo-Croatian to Indo-European [222e]
- Balto-Slavic accentuation: Some news travels slowly
[218e]
- Indo-Uralic and Altaic [216e]
- The linguistic position of the Prussian Second Catechism
[215e]
- Shortening and metatony in the Lithuanian future
[214e]
- Indo-Uralic consonant gradation [213e]
- Glottalization, preaspiration and gemination in English
and Scandinavian [211e]
- Indo-European e-, a-, o- in Slavic [209e]
- Early dialectal diversity in South Slavic II [208e]
- Bad theory, wrong conclusions: M. Halle on Slavic
accentuation [207e]
- The origin and nature of the linguistic parasite
[206e]
- Nivkh as a Uralo-Siberian language [205e]
- The Indo-Uralic verb [203e]
- Initial laryngeals in Anatolian [202e]
- The origin of the Goths [198e]
- On Russenorsk [197e]
- Japanese wa, mo, ga, wo, na, no
[191e]
- Accent and ablaut in the Vedic verb [188e]
- Japanese aru, iru, oru 'to be' [161e]
- Syntax and semantics in the history
of Chinese [158e]
- Are Mongolian and Tungus genetically related? [156e]
- The development of the Prussian language in the 16th century [140e]
- General linguistics and Indo-European
reconstruction [130e]
- The Proto-Germanic pluperfect [128e]
- The origin of the Japanese and Korean accent systems
[125e]
- On the meaning of the Japanese passive [113e]
- The spread of the Indo-Europeans
[111e]
- The Germanic weak preterit [109e]
- The accentuation of neuter nouns in Slovene and West Bulgarian [108e]
- Polabian accentuation [107e]
- The Germanic first class of weak verbs [88e]
- Semiotactics as a Van Wijngaarden grammar [79e]
- A parasitological view of non-constructible sets
[67e]
- From Proto-Indo-European to Slavic
[66e]
- Early dialectal diversity in South Slavic
I [58e]
- Proto-Indo-European verbal syntax [49e]
- Temporal gradation and temporal limitation [47e]
- On the history of the genitive plural in Slavic, Baltic, Germanic, and Indo-European [30e]
- Slavic accentuation [14e]
- Russian nominal flexion [12e]
- Russian conjugation: Computer synthesis of Russian verbal forms [6e]
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last modified:
20/06/2022