Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen, 1999. — VIII, 364 p. — (Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European, vol. 1). — ISBN: 87-7289-529-2.
Contents: Preface. Zur Morphophonemik des Urindogermanischen. Die Erklärung qualitativer, quantitativer und akzentueller Alternationen durch vorurindogermanische Lautgesetze. Determining proto-phonetics by circumstantial evidence: the case of the Indo-European laryngeals. Two phonological issues in Germanic [The exceptions to the Germanic consonant shift. Germanic /gw/ + /j/ and Sievers’ Law. Addendum: Attempt at a relative chronology]. Miscellaneous morphological problems in Indo-European languages I-II [Hittite
memai,
memijanzi ‘speak(s)’. Armenian
gewł ‘village’. Old Irish
olsé ‘said he’, Lat.
uls, and the Hittite ablative. Gāthic Avestan
aγžaonuuamnəm. Greek
μύλη ‘mill’. The 2
nd sg. of the Baltic thematic verb. Slavic
kogo :
česo. Armenian
irears ‘each other’. The Albanian 2. pl. ending
-ni. Hittite
ašaši,
ašešanzi and intensive reduplication. Tocharian A
eṃtsäṣtär, B
eṅkastär ‘seize’]. Miscellaneous morphological problems in Indo-European languages III [Greek
στόμα ‘mouth’,
στωμύλος ‘talkative’. Germanic *
xanxistaz ‘horse’, *
xangistaz ‘stallion’. Armenian
mukn,
jukn. Latin
grandō, Armenian
karkut ‘hail’. Welsh
gorwydd, Gaulish-Latin
verēdus,
veraedus ‘horse’]. A new rule of Indo-European accent: Greek
τόρμος /
κορμός; Germanic *
waiþō / *
skandō. On Hirt’s Law and laryngeal vocalization. Stray Indo-European notes [Lithuanian
álkti ‘be hungry’. Slavic
govędo, Latvian
gùovs. The Lithuanian verbal noun suffix
-imas. Some Albanian monosyllables with
y]. The Indo-European origin of the Balto-Slavic
-ē- and
-ā- preterite. On the status of the aspirated tenues and the Indo-European phonation series. The make-up of Indo-European morphology. The constituent elements of the Indo-European personal pronouns. Die thrakischen Inschriften – Beiträge zu einer neuen Deutung. Lateinisch
similis, griechisch
ὁμαλός, altirisch
samail und die Wurzel von lat.
alō. Miscellaneous morphological problems in Indo-European languages IV [The IE root *
(s)tai̯h3- ‘be compact’. A morphological note on Ved.
āvíḥ. Lithuanian
gyrà. Lithuanian
mir̃ti,
mìrštu ‘die’ and the deverbative ingressive verbs in Indo-European. Vedic
daghnóti, Greek
φθάνω and Vedic
kṣiṇā́ti, Greek
φθίνω. Greek
ἐρωτάω ‘ask, pray’ – with a note on the Indo-European factitive iteratives]. Indo-European ablaut
-i- ~
-e-/
-ο-. New evidence for infixal
-ο- in Indo-European: Ablaut
re-/
οr-. The ablaut resistency of the “thematic vowel”: A Balto-Fennic parallel. On some Slavic Words in
čь :
k from laryngeal?. The Indo-European background of the Slavic nasal-infix presents. Zur Herkunft des slavischen Imperfekts.