Edited by Dorothy Disterheft, Martin Huld and John Greppin. — Washington: Institute for the Study of Man, 1997. — XXVI, 240 p. — (Journal of Indo-European studies. Monograph series, 20). — ISBN 0-941694-54-2.
Preface. Bibliography of Jaan Puhvel. Philip Levine, Dear Jaan.
Anatolian Matters: Harry A.
Hoffner, Jr, On Safari in Hittite Anatolia. John Michael
Kearns, A Lydian Etymology for the Name Croesus. Calvert
Watkins, Luvo-Hittite
lapan(a)-.
Cultural Investigations, Angela
Della Volpe, Problems of Semantic Reconstruction: PIE *deik̂- ‘to show’. Robert L.
Fisher, The Lore of the Staff in Indo-European Tradition. John A.C.
Greppin, A Note on the Etymology of English
Horehound. Martin E.
Huld[/u], Magic, Metathesis, and Nudity in Indo-European Thought. Colin [b]Ireland, The Ambiguous Attitude toward Fosterage in Early Irish Literature.
Grammatical Studies: Dorothy
Disterheft, The Evolution of Indo-European Infinitives. Eric P.
Hamp, Intensive and Perfective
prō̆- in Latin. H. Craig
Melchert, Denominative Verbs in Anatolian. Erich
Neu, Zu einigen Pronominalformen des Hethitischen.
Indologicail Research: Jay
Jasanoff, Where Does Skt
bhávani Come From? Andrew L.
Sihler, The Myth of Direct Reflexes of the the PIE Palatal Series in Kati. Cheryl
Streets,
Ájahād u dvā́ mithuna: A Note on R̥gveda 10.17.1-2.
The Lexical Domain: E.J.W.
Barber, On ἀιγ- as ‘protection’. Karlene
Jones-Bley, Red for the Dead. J.P.
Mallory, Some Aspects of Indo-European Agriculture.