Edited by Romain Garnier. — Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen der Universität Innsbruck, Bereich Sprachwissenschaft, 2020. — 518 p. — (Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft, 164). — ISBN 978-3-85124-751-0.
Contents: Milad
Abedi (University of Zurich), On the later phase of Elamite-Iranian language contact. Chams
Bernard (Leiden University), Some plant and animal names in Gavruni. Michele
Bianconi (University of Oxford), Some thoughts on Anatolian lexicon in Mycenaean Greek. Hugo
Blanchet (Université de Limoges, ÉPHÉ), Méfitis osque et Méfitis romaine, des sources limpides aux eaux pestilentielles. Václav
Blažek (Masaryk University, Brno), Latin
belllua/bēlua ‘beast’ of Celtic origin? Gerd
Carling (Lund University), A dangerous story: the linguistic behaviour of the category sharp cutting implements. Xavier
Delamarre (CNRS – AOROC), Les noms gaulois dans l’onomastique impériale. Romain
Garnier (Université de Limoges, IUF) & Benoit
Sagot (INRIA), New results on a centum substratum in Greek: the Lydian connection. Jean
Hadas-Lebel (Université Lumière Lyon 2), Une origine étrusque pour lat.
corōna? Daniel
Kölligan (Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg), Deaffrication in Armenian? Martin
Kümmel (Friedrich-Schiller Universität Jena), Substrata of lndo-lranic and related questions. Jean-Pierre
Levet (Université de Limoges), Des traces d’un ancêtre eurasiatique en indo-européen ? Rosemarie
Lühr (Friedrich-Sehiller-Universität Jena - Honorarprofessorin an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Zum Langobardischen als Trümmersprache. Vincent
Martzloff (Sorbonne Université), La question du
substrat sicule dans le Latium. Souvenir authentique ou mythe historiographique. Ranko
Matasović (University of Zagreb), Language of the bird names and the pre-Indo-European substratum. Veronika
Milanova (University of Vienna), Sampsa
Holopainen (University of Helsinki), Jeremy
Bradley (University of Vienna), Contact phenomena in IE kinship and social terms and beyond. Georges-Jean
Pinault (ÉPHÉ, PSL), Tocharian lexicon in the light of contact phenomena. Benoit
Sagot (INRIA), A new PIE root *
h₁er- ‘(to be/become) dark red’. Zsolt
Simon (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Die hurritischen Lehnwörter im Keilschriftluwischen. Aljoša
Šorgo (Leiden University), Characteristics of lexemes of a substratum origin in Proto-Germanic. Dan
Ungureanu (Charles University, Prague), The four layers of the lexical substrate in Romanian. Michael
Weiss (Cornell University), The plough and its parts in western Europe.
Index.