Volume 04, Spring 1978
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Volume 04, Spring 1978 by Subject "Historical linguistics"
Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Another look at Tunica vowels(University of Calgary, 1978-05) Latimer, RichardIn several publications on Tunica, an extinct language once spoken in Louisiana, Mary Haas (1950, 1944) presents a vowel inventory which consists of seven phonemes. A close study of the morphophonemic alternations within the language suggests that there were only five underlying vowels and that the occurrence of [ɛ] and [ɔ] was predictable. In this paper, I will attempt to demonstrate that [ɛ] and [ɔ] are derived in two ways: (1) vowel coalescence and (2) assimilation. I will discuss the effects of each of these processes separately.Item Open Access Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, Volume 4, Spring 1978(University of Calgary, 1978-05) De Guzman, Videa P.; Herbert, Robert K.This issue is the fourth in the series of working papers published by LOGOS, the student linguistics club at The University of Calgary. The series provides a vehicle for publications by faculty members and students; these papers represent research in progress and are therefore not to be considered as final statements by the authors. The appearance of these articles in the current issue does not preclude their publication in altered form elsewhere.Item Open Access Comparative and typological perspectives on the reconstruction of the Indo-European "gutturals"(University of Calgary, 1978-05) Southerland, Ronald HIn recent decades there has been a trend in Indo-European studies to place greater weight on typological considerations than on purely comparative evidence in reconstructions. The most oft-cited study in this regard is, of course, Jakobson (1972), in which the author introduced the notion of implicational universals and lauded the "predictive power" of typological studies in reconstruction (p. 304). The present paper takes issue with the blanket application of typological considerations to problems of comparative reconstruction. The specific problem addressed is the set of "guttural" (an out-dated but still handy cover term for the palatal, velar and labio-velars) stops in Proto-Indo-European.Item Open Access The Greek character of Ancient Iberian inscriptions*(University of Calgary, 1978-05) Anderson, James MPre-Roman, non-Celtic Iberian inscriptions, dating from the fifth to the first centuries, B.C. and written in a semi-syllabic orthography of Eastern Mediterranean origins, remain generally undeciphered. That some of the Iberian funeral inscriptions would have been recorded in the Greek language, however, seems logical, certainly after the fact, as Greek trading settlements occupied areas of the Western Mediterranean coasts from the Rhone river to Gibraltar for nearly two centuries before the appearance of the first Iberian inscriptions.