2nd Edition

The Indo-European Languages

Edited By Mate Kapović Copyright 2017
652 Pages
by Routledge

650 Pages
by Routledge

650 Pages
by Routledge

The Indo-European Languages presents a comprehensive survey of the individual languages and language subgroups within this language family. With over four hundred languages and dialects and almost three billion native speakers, the Indo-European language family is the largest of the recognized language groups and includes most of the major current languages of Europe, the Iranian plateau... Read more

List of Maps with Acknowledgements



List of Figures



List of Tables



List of Contributors



Preface



List of Linguistic Abbreviations



List of Periodical Abbreviations



The International Phonetic Alphabet









  1. The Indo-Europeans: Origins and Culture






  2. Proto-Indo-European: Comparison and Reconstruction








    1. Proto-Indo-European Phonology






    2. Proto-Indo-European Morphology






    3. Proto-Indo-European Syntax (NEW)






  3. The Indo-European Linguistics Family: Genetic and Typological Perspectives






  4. Anatolian






  5. Indo-Iranian (NEW section)








    1. Vedic






    2. Sanskrit






    3. The Indic Languages (NEW)






    4. The Iranian Languages






  6. Greek






  7. Italic (NEW section)








    1. Latin






    2. Other Italic Languages






  8. Celtic






  9. Germanic






  10. Armenian






  11. Tocharian






  12. Balto-Slavic (NEW section)








    1. Baltic






    2. Slavic






  13. Albanian






  14. Other Ancient Indo-European Languages (NEW )






Index



Proto-Indo-European reconstructed words/roots glossary (NEW)



Proto-Indo-European vocabulary (semantics) glossary (NEW)



Separate families/languages glossaries (i.e. Sanskrit, Latin, Gothic, English etc.) (NEW)

Biography



Mate Kapović is Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Zagreb, Croatia. He currently teaches courses on Indo-European phonology, Indo-European and Balto-Slavic accentuation, Indo-European morphology, and general phonology.