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Volume 19, Issue 3

2014 Next

Publication date: 23.06.2014

Licence: None

Editorial team

Editor-in-Chief Marek Stachowski

Secretary Barbara Podolak

Issue content

Tomasz Majtczak

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2014, pp. 143 - 160

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.14.008.1651

At many stages of its development the Japanese language has shown a marked tendency to replace analytic constructions with synthetic forms. In the article this phenomenon is presented and investigated by taking the example of some volitive expressions, among other things the Old Japanese construction -(a)maku posi-, which evolved into the Classical Japanese suffix -(a)mafosi-, as well as the Classical Japanese suffix -(a)mau-, whose origin, however, is to be associated with analogical formation rather than phonetic reduction. All phases of the development of these expressions are here copiously illustrated with textual examples.

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Dariusz R. Piwowarczyk

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2014, pp. 161 - 167

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.14.009.1652
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Blažek, Vaclav. 2004. “Indo-European ‘apple(s)’”, in: Die Indogermanistik und Ihre Anrainer. Ed. T. Poschenrieder. Innsbruck: IBS Verlag. Pp. 11–30.
Boryś, Wiesław. 2005. Słownik etymologiczny języka polskiego. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie.
Campbell, Lyle. 2004. Historical Linguistics. An Introduction. Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
Erdal, Marcel. 1993. “Around the Turkic ‘Apple’”. The Journal of Indo-European Studies 21/1–2. Pp. 27–36.
Ernout, Adolf – Meillet, Antoine. 1951. Dictionnaire etymologique de la langue latine. Paris: Librairie C. Klincksieck.
Fortson, Benjamin W. IV. 2010. Indo-European Language and Culture. 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell.
Friedrich, Paul. 1970. The Proto-Indo-European Trees. Chicago-London: University of Chicago Press.
Gamkrelidze, Thomas V. – Ivanov, Vyaceslav V. 1995. Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans. Part I. Berlin-New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Hamp, Eric. 1979. “The North Indo-European word for ‘apple’”. Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie 37. Pp. 158–166.
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Zavaroni, Adolfo. 2008. “I-E. ‘apple’, Hamito-Semitic ‘genitals’ and roots beginning with *HmB-”. Historische Sprachforschung 120. Pp. 20–41.
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Hatice Şirin User

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2014, pp. 169 - 178

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.14.010.1653

The planet Venus, which is the brightest celestial body in the sky after the Moon, takes its astronomical name from the Roman goddess of love, beauty and fertility. It is known in Turkic as Yaruk Yulduzı ‘light star’, Akşam Yıldızı ‘Evening Star’, Sabah Yıldızı ‘Morning Star’, Tan Yıldızı ‘Dawn Star’, Seher Yıldızı id., Kervan Yıldızı ‘Caravan Star’, Kervankıran ‘Caravan-perishing’, Zühre (< Arabic ةرهز), Čolpan and Čoban Yıldızı ‘Shepherd’s Star’. This paper will discuss whether the word Čolpan is etymologically connected with the Proto-Bulgarian title čoban and the Slavic title župan.

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Miguel Villanueva Svensson

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2014, pp. 179 - 187

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.14.011.1654

The Balto-Slavic root *leup- ‘to peel’ (Lith. lùpti, lùpa, Sl. *lupti) can be derived from the root *lep- ‘id.’ (Gk. λέπω) by assuming an original paradigm pres. *lep-e/o- : aor.-inf. *p-. The aorist-infinitive stem developed as follows: *p- > *ulp- → *lup- (after pres. *lep-) → new full grade *leup-.

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Robert Woodhouse

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2014, pp. 189 - 204

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.14.012.1655

Five short articles are presented offering, in some, new etymological suggestions (§§ 1. μάχομαι ‘fight’, μισθός ‘reward’, 2. βούλομαι ‘want, wish’ : Slavic *gòlъ ‘bare, naked’, 4. εἵλη ‘warmth, heat of the sun’), in others, comments on existing etymologies (§§ 1. μισθός ‘reward’, 3. οὖτα ‘wound’, 5. ὄνυξ ‘nail’ and delabialization by *l in North and East Germanic). Two of the items present alternatives to reconstructions with PIE *a (§§ 1, 3).

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