Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd., 2006
ISBN 10: 8120830628 ISBN 13: 9788120830622
Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 11,69
Anzahl: 4 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. pp. x + 326.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Motilal Banarsidass, New Delhi, 2006
ISBN 10: 8120830628 ISBN 13: 9788120830622
Anbieter: Vedams eBooks (P) Ltd, New Delhi, Indien
Hardbound. Zustand: As New. New. Contents Preface. 1. The development of proto Indo Iranian sc into Sanskrit/(c)ch/Masato Kobayashi. 2. Reflexivization in the Rig Veda (and beyond)/Hans Henrich Hock. 3. The Vedic medio passive aorists statives and their participles reconsidering the paradigm/Leonid Kulikov. 4. On the evolutionary changes in the old and middle Indo Aryan systems of case and adpositions/Vit Bubenik. 5. Notes on the instrumental case of the subject/agent vs. other cases in Buddhist Sanskrit/Boris Oguibenine. 6. Prakrit like developments in old Indo Aryan testing the Kolver principle/Erik Seldeslachts. 7. Iranian elements in Sanskrit/Hassan Rezai Baghbidi. 8. Further links between the Indo Iranian substratum and the BMAC language/Georges Jean Pinault. 9. Indo Aryan and Dravidian convergence gerunds and noun composition/Hartmut Scharfe. 10. The Sanskrit translation of the Avestan Haoma Liturgy in the light of recent research/John S. Sheldon. 11. A preliminary study of Gandhari lexicography/Andrew Glass. 12. Lexicon directed segmentation and tagging in Sanskrit/Gerard Huet. Index. The present volume contains twelve of the sixteen papers presented at the linguistics section of the 12 World Sanskrit Conference (Helsinki Finland 13 18 July 2003). The papers span a wide range of topics and time depth extending from common Indo Iranian all the way to Modern Indo Aryan. The problems and tasks addressed in these contributions pertain to the historical phonology of Sanskrit Vedic morphosyntax the evolutionary morphosyntax of Indo Aryan the Syntax of Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Old Indo Aryan etymologies Iranian Loanwords in Sanskrit ancient Central and South Asian language contacts the Sanskrit translation of the Avestan Haoma Liturgy Gandhari lexicography and the computer processing of Sanskrit. A trend which can be discerned in some of these papers as well as in present day Sanskrit studies in general is the ever increasing impact of modern linguistic theories on in particular phonology and syntax. Computational linguistics which has much to offer in terms of utility and challenges is a newcomer in the field. 326 pp.