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1
LINGUIST List Resources for Norse, Old
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2
Tam o' Shanter: A New Translation ...
Perkins, Mark. - : Humanities Commons, 2022
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3
Comparison and gradation in Indo-European
Keydana, Götz (Herausgeber). - Berlin : De Gruyter Mouton, 2021
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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4
Review: A Comparative Grammar of the Early Germanic Languages (2018), by R.D. Fulk ...
Goering, Nelson. - : Humanities Commons, 2021
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5
Named-Entity Dataset for Medieval Latin, Middle High German and Old Norse
In: Journal of Open Humanities Data; Vol 7 (2021); 23 ; 2059-481X (2021)
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6
Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Old Norse
: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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7
Reginsmál annotation ...
Besnier Clément. - : Zenodo, 2021
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8
Reginsmál annotation ...
Besnier Clément. - : Zenodo, 2021
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9
Inherited Poetics and Indo-European Cosmological Structure in the Vǫluspá, the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, and the Telipinu myth
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - : Villa Vigoni Editore, 2021. : country:ITA, 2021. : place:Loveno di Menaggio, 2021
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10
Metaphor, metonymy, and myth: Persephone’s death-like journey in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter in the light of Greek phraseology, Indo-European poetics, and Cognitive Linguistics
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2021. : country:GBR, 2021. : place:Newcastle Upon Tyne, 2021
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11
Old Norse-derived lexis in multilingual accounts: a case study
Roig-Marín, Amanda. - : Cambridge University Press, 2021
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12
Nordic umlaut, contrastive features and stratal phonology
In: Nordlyd: Tromsø University Working Papers on Language & Linguistics, Vol 45, Iss 1 (2021) (2021)
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13
Emotions in Njáls saga and Egils saga: Approaches and literary analysis ...
Thorgeirsdottir, Brynja. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2020
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14
Eduard Sievers’ Altgermanisch Metrik 125 years on ...
Goering, Nelson. - : Humanities Commons, 2020
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15
Foamy Rivers and the Wife of the Ocean: Greek ποταμός ‘river’, Τηθῡ́ς ‘mother of all rivers’, and Proto‑Indo‑European *ku̯eth2‑ ‘foam, seethe’
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - : Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 2020. : country:FIN, 2020. : place:Helsinki, 2020
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16
Indo-European Cosmology and Poetics: Cosmic Merisms in Comparative and Cognitive Perspective
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - 2020
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17
Gods who shine through the millennia: Old Norse Baldr, Celtic Belinos, Old Irish Balar, and PIE *bʰelH- ‘be white, shine’
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - : Baar-Verlag, 2020. : country:DEU, 2020. : place:Hamburg, 2020
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18
Myths of Non-Functioning Fertility Deities in Hittite and Core Indo-European
Ginevra, Riccardo (orcid:0000-0002-6731-6494). - : Brill, 2020. : country:NLD, 2020. : place:Leiden, 2020. : place:Boston, 2020
Abstract: The Hittite myth of Telipinu, the Greek myth of Demeter and Persephone, the Norse myth of Baldr and the Indic myths of Cyavana reflect an inherited Proto-Indo-European mythical theme about “Non-Functioning Fertility Deities”, as shown by the fact that they display several phraseological and thematic parallels in their employment of poetic devices describing the non-functioning, or incapacitated, state of the protagonists and the consequent non-functioning condition of the cosmos around them. The use of these poetic devices is a reflex of inherited Proto-Indo-European poetic culture, as they systematically match phraseological collocations and themes attested in several Indo-European traditions describing the existential conditions of any non-functioning character (e.g. dead characters) and of any non-functioning cosmos (e.g. the world at the End of Time), respectively. The Greek, Norse and (to some extent) the Indic narratives also attest structurally comparable scenes involving horses, whereas the Hittite myth does not, thus reflecting an innovation which must have taken place after the split between Proto-Anatolian and Core Indo-European (from which Greek, Old Norse and Sanskrit later developed). The chariots employed in the Greek and Indic narratives must reflect an even younger innovation (after the 21st century BCE).
Keyword: comparative; Germanic; Greek; historical; Homeric; Icelandic; Indo-European; Linguistics; Mythology; Old Norse; Poetics; Sanskrit; Settore L-LIN/01 - GLOTTOLOGIA E LINGUISTICA; Vedic
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10807/177360
https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004416192
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19
Emotions in Njáls saga and Egils saga: Approaches and literary analysis
Thorgeirsdottir, Brynja. - : University of Cambridge, 2020. : Clare Hall, 2020
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20
The devil in the desert : representations of the demonic in Old Norse translated hagiography
A. Meregalli. - 2020
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