New Lights On Indo- European Comparative Grammar
Book Specification
Item Code: | UAF826 |
Author: | Satya Swarupa Misra |
Publisher: | Sharada Publishing House, Delhi |
Language: | English |
Edition: | 1989 |
ISBN: | 8185616310 |
Pages: | 172 |
Cover: | HARDCOVER |
Other Details | 9.00 X 6.00 inch |
Weight | 370 gm |
Book Description
The work also deals with all aspects of the Laryngeal Theory from the point of view of the theory itself and the theory has been quite elaborately examined in a spread out manner with reference to its application by the laryngealists to different aspects of Indo-European Grammar at appropriate places in due order.
Though the work is undoubtedly an outcome of higher research, yet the beginners will find it interesting and helpful, since several intricacies of hido-European Grammar have been dealt with.
Preface New Lights on Indo-European Comparative Grammar presents the result of my researches on different aspects of Indo-European phonology and morphology.
The present work is also in a way complementary to two of my former major works, A Comparative Grammar of Sanskrit, Greek and Hittite, and The Laryngeal Controversy. In the first one all controversies were avoided and new suggestions were often made without going into detail of controversies, since 1 was confident that my basis for the conclusions was self-illuminating. But a review of the same by a well-known scholar made me aware that he also mis-understood many points, probably due to the brevity of exposition in the said work. I, therefore, consider it to be my moral duty to help my friends in expressing myself more elaborately, especially with reference to my original contributions to Indo-European Comparative Grammar. The other major work, The Laryngeal Controversy, which quite elaborately discusses and refutes the Laryngeal Theory was originally a thesis and won the Sir Ashutosh Gold Medal of the Calcutta University in 1968, as the best thesis in literature. This was published in a somewhat condensed form in Indian Linguistics, Vol 29 ( 1968 ). This work deals with all aspects of the Laryngeal Theory from the point of view of the theory itself, whereas in the present work, the theory has been quite elaborately examined in a spread out manner with reference to its application by the laryngealists to different aspects of Indo-European Comparative Grammar in phonology and morphology at appropriate places in due order, along with my original contributions which are not primarily concerned with the Laryngeal theory.
Book's Contents and Sample Pages