Volume 1&
2. — Eisenbrauns, 1997. — 1073 p. — ISBN: 1575060175 1575060183 1575060191
Technical advisor, Peter T. Daniels
This work has evolved over the course of the past few years and has involved the cooperation of 39 distinguished linguists. The goal of this publication is to provide a summary of what is currently known about the phonology of selected Asian and African languages. In addition, three languages of the Caucasus are included.
As such, uniformity in methodology and terminology has not been a desideratum, nor would it have been possible to attain.
Afroasiatic LanguagesAkkadian and Amorite Phonology
Eblaite Phonology
Ugaritic Phonology
Phoenician and Punic Phonology
Ancient Hebrew Phonology
Tiberian Hebrew Phonology
Jewish Palestinian Aramaic Phonology
Old Aramaic Phonology
Classical Syriac Phonology
Modern and Classical Mandaic Phonology
Old South Arabian Phonology
Ge'ez Phonology
Arabic Phonology
Moroccan Arabic Phonology
Cypriot Arabic Phonology
Maltese Phonology
Israeli Hebrew Phonology
Modern Aramaic Phonology
La phonologie des langues sudarabiques modernes
Chaha (Gurage) Phonology
Amharic Phonology
Egyptian and Coptic Phonology
Berber Phonology
Awngi Phonology
Oromo Phonology
Somali Phonology
Hausa Phonology
List of Maps
List of Tables
Indo-European LanguagesHittite Phonology
Old Persian andAvestan Phonology
Pahlavi Phonology
Hindi-Urdu Phonology
Gujarati Phonology
Persian Phonology
Kurdish Phonology
Ossetic Phonology
Pashto Phonology
Balochi Phonology
Armenian Phonology
Dravidian LanguagesBrahui Phonology
Nilo-Saharan LanguagesNilo-Saharan Phonology
Niger-Congo LanguagesSwahili Phonology
Sango Phonology
Altaic Languages
Turkish Phonology
Tatar (Volga Tatar, Kazan Tatar) Phonology
Uyghur Phonology
Caucasian LanguagesGeorgian Phonology
Chechen Phonology
Lak Phonology
Unaffiliated Languages (Language Isolates)Sumerian Phonology
Burushaski Phonology