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WALS Online Resources for Coptic
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: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Coptic
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: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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Demonstrative pronouns and articles in Egyptian and Coptic ... : emergence and development ...
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Comprehensive Coptic Lexicon: Including Loanwords from Ancient Greek v 1.2 ... : Version 1.2 ...
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Linguistic and legal continuity in 6th to 8th century Coptic documents: a comparative study of Greek and Coptic legal formulae in Byzantine and Early Islamic Egypt
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Comprehensive Coptic Lexicon: Including Loanwords from Ancient Greek v 1 ... : Version 1 ...
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From suffix to prefix to interposition via Differential Object Marking in Egyptian-Coptic ...
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From suffix to prefix to interposition via Differential Object Marking in Egyptian-Coptic ...
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“Et les enseignes s’inclinèrent” : possibles allusions aux Actes de Pilate dans quelques homélies coptes
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In: Gnose et Manichéisme. Entre les oasis d'Egypte et la Route de la Soie. Hommage à Jean-Daniel Dubois ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01525800 ; A. Van den Kerchove, L. G. Soares Santoprete (eds.). Gnose et Manichéisme. Entre les oasis d'Egypte et la Route de la Soie. Hommage à Jean-Daniel Dubois , Bibliothèque de l'Ecole des Hautes Etudes 176, série Histoire et prosopographie de la section des sciences religieuses, Brepols,, pp.521 - 541, 2017, ⟨10.1484/M.BEHE-EB.4.01135⟩ (2017)
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Greek Causal discourse markers in Coptic letters. A case study on the pragmatics of code-switching
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In: Language contact and bilingualism in antiquity: What linguistic borrowing into Coptic can tell us about ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01481005 ; P. Dils, E. Grossman, S. Richter, W. Schenkel Language contact and bilingualism in antiquity: What linguistic borrowing into Coptic can tell us about, Widmaier Verlag, 2016, Lingua Aegyptia – Studia Monographica ; http://wwwuser.gwdg.de/~lingaeg/studmon.htm (2016)
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Greek Causal discourse markers in Coptic letters. A case study on the pragmatics of code-switching
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In: Language contact and bilingualism in antiquity: What linguistic borrowing into Coptic can tell us about ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01481005 ; P. Dils, E. Grossman, S. Richter, W. Schenkel Language contact and bilingualism in antiquity: What linguistic borrowing into Coptic can tell us about, Widmaier Verlag, 2016, Lingua Aegyptia – Studia Monographica ; http://wwwuser.gwdg.de/~lingaeg/studmon.htm (2016)
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Egyptian-Coptic linguistics in typological perspective
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MPI-SHH Linguistik
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Greek conjunctions in non-literary Coptic in the Late Byzantine/Early Islamic period
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Cook, Samuel. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2015
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Abstract:
Theoretical thesis. ; Bibliography: pages 121-131. ; 1. Introduction -- 2. Literary review and methodology -- 3. Enclitic conjunctions -- 4. Subordinating conjunctions -- 5. Coordinating conjunctions -- 6. Conclusions. ; Despite the long history of loanword studies in Coptic, little is known about lexical borrowing in non-literary texts. Furthermore, little research has been conducted on the borrowing of Greek function words into the Egyptian language. This study examines the use of Greek loanwords in non-literary Coptic texts through a focus on three classes of Greek conjunctions – enclitic conjunctions, subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunctions. Data from this study is drawn from legal texts and letters from the Theban region, composed in the 7th and 8th centuries. ; The results from this study have important implications for our understanding of Greek and Egyptian language contact, the language of non-literary texts, and scribal practices in Late Antique Egypt. In particular, the presence of Greek conjunctions appears to be closely tied to the formulaic sections of documents. In many cases there appears to be a preference outside of these formulae for native Egyptian constructions. Furthermore, the uneven distribution of words within and outside of these formulae suggest certain Greek conjunctions were more integrated into the language of non-literary Coptic texts than others whose use may be influenced be the structure of earlier Greek documents. ; Mode of access: World wide web ; 1 online resource (viii, 140 pages)
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Keyword:
Coptic language -- Conjunctions; Coptic language -- Foreign words and phrases; Greek language -- Conjunctions
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1101187
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