Anthony Yates

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Anthony Yates

Anthony Yates

@adyates

i like languages — old/dead or otherwise — and i write about them (https://t.co/4YOZYX7MqZ); asst prof @UCLA, PIES (https://t.co/RDjsadkJ6m)/NELC (https://t.co/j5seI7foMh)

Los Angeles Tham gia Nisan 2009
652 Đang theo dõi489 Người theo dõi
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Ed Pedraza-Robles
Ed Pedraza-Robles@isomorphologism·
'Cross-linguistic' and 'typological' have often been used interchangeably in papers. (1) Are these synonymous? (2) Does your work often involve a sample of languages? Feel free to explain the difference in comments.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@Miftahuzzaman8 The orthography and phonology chapter is about twice the length as in the first edition — go read it and find out!
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
Christmas came early this year.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
The difference in the cover is subtle, but the difference in heft is not.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
My collaborators and I will present shortly about the Proto-Indo-European nasal infix *–ne–. It's the only infix — what's up with that? You can find our answer here: adyates.com/uploads/1/1/2/…
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
The last talk of the conference is by myself and collaborators. More details on that shortly.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
Tomorrow (25.10) is the first day of the 35th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference! We start at 9:30 PDT. The conference is free and open to the public (in Royce 314). It will also be streamed on Zoom; you can register to receive the link here: pies.ucla.edu/conference/wec…
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@MWeissOHCGL @Mellohi_enwikt I take *-ei- to be a different suffix already at the PIE stage (Hitt. utne- is usually put here, though the neuter gender is odd); that it also made nouns with HK-type mobility is interesting (and seems unlikely to be coincidental), but I don’t have any real view as to why.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@MWeissOHCGL @Mellohi_enwikt Right, as Michael says here, my claim is only that animate nouns formed with the suffix *-oi- are reconstructible with HK-type accentual mobility.
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Mellohi
Mellohi@Mellohi_enwikt·
@adyates I saw your paper about how PIE -oi- stems were hysterokinetic, but how do you square Latin -ēs (as in sēdēs "seat", aedēs etc. which is derived by Italicists like @MWeissOHCGL from hysterokinetic -ei- stems, for which I have yet to see non-Italic evidence)... (1/3)
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
I was reminded yesterday of a fantastic upcoming opportunity for aspiring Anatolianists/IEists: Oxford’s Anatolian Languages and Linguistics Summer School! A neat chance to learn from some of the best — and registration is now open!
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@silmeth @lagorton @Norsebysw But thanks for making me clarify! As for the Irish — cool! I’m not opposed to seeing ergativity as a language-internal development, i just think that it often gets (plausibly) invoked as a factor in the change.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@avzaagzonunaada If we were all being as precise as we should be and consistently used pre-Proto-Greek to refer to the internally reconstructed ancestor of Proto-Greek, I suppose we could just keep “pre-Greek” as is. But I maintain that we’re better off ditching it.
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Anthony Yates
Anthony Yates@adyates·
@avzaagzonunaada Do we actually have this terminological confusion in other IE branches? Or outside of IE? If it’s just a Greek thing, might be easier to rebrand the substrate “pre-Greek” (which seems like a problematic label anyway).
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