Brill's Studies in Indo-European Languages & Linguistics

Series Editors:
Olav Hackstein
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Michael Weiss
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This series offers a new venue for high-quality original studies in Indo-European linguistics, from both a comparative and historical perspective, including relevant works on the prehistory/early history of the oldest descendant languages. It will also welcome studies in poetics and comparative mythology that include a significant linguistic and philological component. It seeks especially to fulfill the unmet need for analyses that employ innovative approaches and take account of the latest developments in general linguistic models and methods. The scope of the series is avowedly international, but authors are encouraged to write in English to maximize dissemination of their ideas.

To discuss your book idea or submit a proposal, please contact Giada Palmieri.
The Aeolic Dialects of Ancient Greek
A Study in Historical Dialectology and Linguistic Classification
Volume 26
978-90-04-54371-3
The Tocharian Gender System
A Diachronic Study in Nominal Morphology
Volume 25
978-90-04-53289-2
Homer from Z to A
Metrics, Linguistics, and Zenodotus
Volume 24
978-90-04-52234-3
Religiöse Kommunikation im Umbrischen und Hethitischen
Fachsprachlichkeit in Ritualtexten und Gebeten
Volume 23
978-90-04-43659-6
The Gothic Resultative
Non-agentive Verbs and Perfect Expression in Early Germanic
Volume 22
978-90-04-44813-1
Anatolian Verbal Stem Formation
Luwian, Lycian and Lydian
Volume 21
978-90-04-43629-9
The Hittite Middle Voice
Synchrony, Diachrony, Typology
Volume 20
978-90-04-43230-7
Dispersals and Diversification
Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on the Early Stages of Indo-European
Volume 19
978-90-04-41619-2
Language and Meter
Volume 18
978-90-04-35777-8
Classical Greek Syntax
Wackernagel's Law in Herodotus
Volume 16
978-90-04-25068-0
The Indo-European Syllable
Volume 15
978-90-04-29302-1
Proto-Slavic Inflectional Morphology
A Comparative Handbook
Volume 14
978-90-04-27050-3
Die Vorgeschichte des slavischen Aoristsystems
mit der kommentierten Belegsammlung der Aoristformen und Formen des präteritalen passiven Partizipiums im Altkirchenslavischen
Volume 10
978-90-04-26123-5
The Tocharian Subjunctive
A Study in Syntax and Verbal Stem Formation
Volume 8
978-90-04-24879-3
Sabellian Demonstratives
Forms and Functions
Volume 6
978-90-04-21699-0
Time, Tense and Aspect in Early Vedic Grammar
Exploring Inflectional Semantics in the Rigveda
Volume 5
978-90-47-44050-5
The Tocharian Verbal System
Volume 3
978-90-04-18844-0
Language and Ritual in Sabellic Italy
The Ritual Complex of the Third and the Fourth Tabulae Iguvinae
Volume 1
978-90-47-44025-3
Olav Hackstein (Ph.D. in Linguistics, 1995) is Professor of Historical and Indo-European Linguistics at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany. His interests are in the historical morphology and syntax of the ancient Indo-European languages.
Michael Weiss (Ph.D. Linguistics, 1993) is a professor in the Department of Linguistics at Cornell University. He works on the historical phonology and morphology of the ancient Indo-European languages, especially those of ancient Italy.
Series Editors:
Olav Hackstein, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany
Michael Weiss, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

Founding Editor:
Craig Melchert, Prof. em., University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA

Editorial Board:
Paola Cotticelli, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
José Luis García Ramón, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
David Goldstein, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Stephanie Jamison, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Ronald Kim, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poznań, Poland
Alexander Lubotsky, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands
Melanie Malzahn, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Alan J. Nussbaum, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
Georges-Jean Pinault, EPHE - Écoles Pratiques des Hautes Études, Paris, France
Jeremy Rau, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Elisabeth Rieken, Philipps University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany
Stefan Schumacher, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
All those engaged in research and teaching of Indo-European and/or historical linguistics. In addition it targets Classicists, Indologists, Germanicists and researchers working on the individual languages of Indo-European or on the history and/or culture of Indo-European.
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