Helmut Buske Verlag, 2022. — 322 p.
The Program in Indo-European Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, sponsors an Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference. The Conference welcomes participation by linguists, philologists, and others engaged in all aspects of Indo-European studies. These Proceedings include papers presented at the Thirty-Second Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference, held in an online format.
Michele Bianconi - A New Look at Phrygian Metre
Chiara Bozzone and Ryan Sandell - One or Many Homers? Using Quantitative Authorship Analysis to Study the Homeric Question
Isabelle de Meyer - Myc. a-mo and Gk. ἅρμα: The Enigma that Keeps on Rolling
Benjamin W. Fortson IV - The ber Necessities: The Second Singular Aorist Imperative in Armenian
José L. García Ramón - The Greek Infinitives in Aor. -σαι, Med.-Pass. -εσθαι, -σθαι
Riccardo Ginevra - On Chariots and at Sea: Indo-European Gods of Mobility – Old Norse Njǫrðr, Vedic Sanskrit Nā́satya-, and Proto-Indo-European *nes-ḗt-/-ét- ‘returning (safely home), arriving (at the desired goal)’
Stefan Höfler - Greek Adjectives in -ης (-ᾱς): An Overlooked Type?
Anahita Hoose - On Aorist Stems Surviving in Epic Sanskrit
Ronald I. Kim - The Prehistory of Ossetic Verbal Inflection (I): Present Indicative and Imperative
Jared S. Klein - On Double Determination in the Classical Armenian Noun Phrase
Valentina Lunardi - φ-feature Hierarchy and Old Irish Object Pronoun Distribution
Teigo Onishi - Clitic Doubling in Tocharian B
Zachary Rothstein-Dowden - Against the Supposed Law of Geminate Sibilant Occlusion in Indic
Andrei Sideltsev - Finer-Grained Hittite Syntax: Hittite Philology and Theory-Dependent Construals—The Case of Vocatives and the Left Periphery
Anthony D. Yates - Emergent Mobility in Indo-European *-r/n-stems and Its Implications for the Reconstruction of the Neuter Plural