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1
Refining Phrygian diachronic phonology: The case of Phrygian (?) γάλλς 'priest'
Woodhouse, Robert H.. - : Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, 2010
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2
Three Germanic etyma requiring Pie *b?
Woodhouse, Robert H.. - : Jagiellonian University Press, 2009
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3
An overview of research on Phrygian from the Nineteenth Century to the present day
Woodhouse, Robert H.. - : Jagiellonian University Press, 2009
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4
The Sindhi implosives: archaism or innovation?
Woodhouse, Robert H.. - : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, 2009
Abstract: The belief that the Sindhi implosives represent direct inheritance of the voiced preglottalized mediae, which are reliably reconstructed for the greater part of PIE on other grounds, is shown to be inconsistent with the presence in Sindhi of exceptions to Lubotsky's rule of laryngeal loss before voiced preglottalized media in Indo-Iranian irrespective of whether Sindhi is regarded as being generally derivable from Vedic or has having pursued a substantially independent development. Thus, in both cases, the evidence for relatively late retention of a consonantal reflex of the PIE laryngeals beside the evidence for the (in Sindhi, erstwhile) coexistence of simplex retroflex and dental stops in the Indo-Aryan occlusive series corresponding to the PIE mediae argues for relatively early loss of preglottalization in most if not all environments. Consequently the reappearance of implosives in those environments in Sindhi in which it was lost represents a fresh process and not adaptation to any existing model. Arguments for the general superiority of deriving Sindhi from Vedic rather than directly from Proto-Indo-Iranian are also presented (in n. 46 and in the Appendix), as is a concluding argument that the widespread if not ubiquitous voiced preglottalized stops of PIE derive from some kind of nonglottalized voiced obstruents and thus represent no evidence for the by now traditional 'glottalic theory'.
Keyword: 200406 Language in Time and Space (incl. Historical Linguistics; 970120 Expanding Knowledge in Language; C1; Communication and Culture; Dialectology); Proto-Indo-Iranian; Sindhi language; tectals
URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:196116
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5
Review of Karin Larsen, The Evolution of the System of Long and Short Adjectives in Old Russian, Slavistische Beitrage 439 (Munich: Otto Sagner, 2005)
Woodhouse, Robert H. - : The School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies, The University of Queensland, 2009
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6
The distribution of the reflexes of Proto-Slavic *Q in the Freising Texts: An updated restatement
Woodhouse, Robert H.. - : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2008
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