- Page 1: STUDIES IN ARMENIAN ETYMOLOGY WITH
- Page 5 and 6: 3 �����������
- Page 7 and 8: Acknowledgements Acknowledgements C
- Page 9 and 10: 2.1.22.6 PIE *dw- > Arm. -rk- or -k
- Page 11 and 12: C. Semantics, Semantics, Semantics,
- Page 13 and 14: INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION INTRODUCT
- Page 15: PART PART I I AAAARMENIAN RMENIAN R
- Page 18 and 19: At any case, the spread of the PIE
- Page 20 and 21: 261) who considers the etymology un
- Page 22 and 23: Though the textual evidence needs f
- Page 24 and 25: J�ahukyan (1983: 86-87; 1987: 142
- Page 26 and 27: alawunk`, alawunk` alawunk` alawunk
- Page 28 and 29: Usually *h2leh1-ur is reconstructed
- Page 30 and 31: Siracides 24.31/41 (= Gr. ���
- Page 32 and 33: In P`awstos Buzand 3.20 (1883=1984:
- Page 34 and 35: 141, 183) suggests *angoli- > *angi
- Page 36 and 37: I suggest the following solution: *
- Page 38 and 39: If the basic meaning of aɫx was in
- Page 40 and 41: On the problem of *-ln- > Arm. -ɫ-
- Page 42 and 43: "рассыпали по дорог
- Page 44 and 45: His instrument is called first net
- Page 46 and 47: found in his 1987: 296, where J�a
- Page 48 and 49: 1930: 109; Leroy 1986: 71-72]. Next
- Page 50 and 51: a‰uk a‰uk a‰uk a‰uk `groin
- Page 52 and 53:
animal-name which certainly is an A
- Page 54 and 55:
����DIAL DIAL No dialectal
- Page 56 and 57:
nowhere finds support. However, the
- Page 58 and 59:
only thereafter mentions Skt. na�
- Page 60 and 61:
Mentioned only in Ali�an 1910: 12
- Page 62 and 63:
(1883=1984: 86 L-1 ; transl. Garso
- Page 64 and 65:
The absence of an initial h- may be
- Page 66 and 67:
with -y- analogically after NSg *h2
- Page 68 and 69:
Proto-Armenian, though, of course,
- Page 70 and 71:
ayr ayr ayr ayr 2 i-stem (ISg ayriw
- Page 72 and 73:
(RV+), etc. [Hu�bschmann 1897: 41
- Page 74 and 75:
z-analut`-oy (HAB 1: 179a, without
- Page 76 and 77:
of deer, and amongst them the red d
- Page 78 and 79:
anari, anari anari anari ea-stem (G
- Page 80 and 81:
angɫ ang ang angɫ ɫ The Greek an
- Page 82 and 83:
The word and is scarcely represente
- Page 84 and 85:
found next to GDPl drand-e-a-c`, va
- Page 86 and 87:
interprets ant`kal as *anut`-a-kal,
- Page 88 and 89:
(1963a: 89; 1987: 112, 157) develop
- Page 90 and 91:
In a variant of the Armenian epic t
- Page 92 and 93:
cannot be ruled out completely, but
- Page 94 and 95:
tak see Ter-Mkrt‰`yan 1970: 149a.
- Page 96 and 97:
�arabaɫ has only the verb; the (
- Page 98 and 99:
the process of combing the head tha
- Page 100 and 101:
ankiwn, ankiwn ankiwn ankiwn an-ste
- Page 102 and 103:
economical and plausible since it d
- Page 104 and 105:
����ETYM ETYM Corresponds t
- Page 106 and 107:
����DIAL DIAL No dialectal
- Page 108 and 109:
Next to the classical GDPl a‰`ac`
- Page 110 and 111:
����ETYM ETYM Composed as a
- Page 112 and 113:
"fairy-tales" (ar�aspeleawk`n) an
- Page 114 and 115:
ar�asta ar ar ar�astaɫɫɫɫ
- Page 116 and 117:
����DIAL DIAL Widespread in
- Page 118 and 119:
For ar�oganem Greppin (1983: 301)
- Page 120 and 121:
[Davt`yan 1966: 317]. Next to a�s
- Page 122 and 123:
The Ham�en aorist formation is re
- Page 124 and 125:
astɫɫɫɫ, ast ast ast ɫ-stem: I
- Page 126 and 127:
might compare with *louk-s-neh2- `m
- Page 128 and 129:
uncertain, cf. Greppin 1978: 21; 19
- Page 130 and 131:
acceptable (see s.v. t`urc1). The A
- Page 132 and 133:
egions, e.g. in S�irak, in a fair
- Page 134 and 135:
araw���� araw araw araw `a
- Page 136 and 137:
araws1 araws araws araws `virgin so
- Page 138 and 139:
`be�jaune, sans expe�rience, na
- Page 140 and 141:
description of the bird and some ge
- Page 142 and 143:
-n cf. hun and -sun. Olsen (1999: 1
- Page 144 and 145:
However, the appurtenance of the Ge
- Page 146 and 147:
Gabikean 1952: 341]. Thus, it may b
- Page 148 and 149:
The verb may be regarded as a deriv
- Page 150 and 151:
noting that the component *asp is u
- Page 152 and 153:
A *h2eg^-ro- (cf. also Skt. a�jra
- Page 154 and 155:
Typologically cf. also Hitt. gimra
- Page 156 and 157:
However, the connection of Arm. awa
- Page 158 and 159:
ather than *-d-, providing us with
- Page 160 and 161:
comparison should not be excluded;
- Page 162 and 163:
The similar problem of Arm. i� `v
- Page 164 and 165:
Anania S�irakac`i (7th cent.): Ya
- Page 166 and 167:
ay, bay bay bay according to NHB 1:
- Page 168 and 169:
elong to a PD paradigm with NSg *b
- Page 170 and 171:
mythology, which have been transfor
- Page 172 and 173:
A‰ar�yan mentions the compariso
- Page 174 and 175:
I propose to interpret it as compos
- Page 176 and 177:
`grandfather', cf. *pap-uk `old man
- Page 178 and 179:
oyt`2 boyt` boyt` boyt` `felloe'. A
- Page 180 and 181:
`feast', Lat. fungor `to enjoy; to
- Page 182 and 183:
oreni, boreni boreni boreni wo-stem
- Page 184 and 185:
Attested only in Vanakan Vardapet T
- Page 186 and 187:
Among new derivatives A‰ar�yan
- Page 188 and 189:
Next to the regular �arabaɫ k y
- Page 190 and 191:
For the component *gar�- Perixanj
- Page 192 and 193:
����ETYM ETYM A‰ar�yan
- Page 194 and 195:
The PIE root is mainly represented
- Page 196 and 197:
*u�ern�-) `white poplar'. Peter
- Page 198 and 199:
����DIAL DIAL Ala�kert, A
- Page 200 and 201:
the root for `roll' and takes as an
- Page 202 and 203:
-e�w-/-iw-( �) on which see Mei
- Page 204 and 205:
cattle; hall, court (also of a temp
- Page 206 and 207:
The i-stem of giwt is based on: GDS
- Page 208 and 209:
Czech hove�ti `to satisfy, show i
- Page 210 and 211:
76; J�ahukyan 1982: 125; Clackson
- Page 212 and 213:
(ibid.) notes that the word cannot
- Page 214 and 215:
if doniw is rather the instrumental
- Page 216 and 217:
Armenian; 2) Arm. don/donik derives
- Page 218 and 219:
appears in the same sentence we are
- Page 220 and 221:
*ag^ h es-) is uncertain; see Mayrh
- Page 222 and 223:
HAB 2: 54a]. For numerous textual i
- Page 224 and 225:
����ETYM ETYM Since Peterma
- Page 226 and 227:
The Greek is considered to be of no
- Page 228 and 229:
sequence *-rt- yields Arm. -rd-, fo
- Page 230 and 231:
oth *krV- and *k^rV- are merely sim
- Page 232 and 233:
erkar, erkar erkar erkar a-stem acc
- Page 234 and 235:
`fearful', ������ `to f
- Page 236 and 237:
dissimilation) took place [Meillet
- Page 238 and 239:
n. `olive-oil; anointing-oil; any o
- Page 240 and 241:
zatik, zatik zatik zatik a-stem: GD
- Page 242 and 243:
����DIAL DIAL Dialectally u
- Page 244 and 245:
t`an, t`an t`an t`an i-stem accordi
- Page 246 and 247:
semantic discussion with references
- Page 248 and 249:
district of Martuni, close by T`aɫ
- Page 250 and 251:
However, the word is probably a Per
- Page 252 and 253:
t`it`eɫn t`it`e t`it`e t`it`eɫn2,
- Page 254 and 255:
Amar�n a t`ət`ərmaɫi, Ax‰i e
- Page 256 and 257:
`a lung-illness of animals'. The in
- Page 258 and 259:
oard, etc.', Lat. tell�s, -�ris
- Page 260 and 261:
According to A‰ar�yan (HAB 2: 1
- Page 262 and 263:
J�ahukyan (1987: 307) points out
- Page 264 and 265:
efer to HAB 2: 208a; Aɫayan 1974:
- Page 266 and 267:
turns out that the first and third
- Page 268 and 269:
*law----/lap` *law *law *law /lap`-
- Page 270 and 271:
The initial l- is troublesome. It i
- Page 272 and 273:
According to Mann (1963: 3), derive
- Page 274 and 275:
����DIAL DIAL luc `yoke' an
- Page 276 and 277:
A‰ar�yan (ibid.) derives �ara
- Page 278 and 279:
xot`(ot)em `to look with a scowling
- Page 280 and 281:
For xanj-oɫ, A‰ar�yan (1913: 4
- Page 282 and 283:
Looking through the attestations of
- Page 284 and 285:
The meaning `hard, rough, stony', r
- Page 286 and 287:
preserved in the opposite corners o
- Page 288 and 289:
��������, ���
- Page 290 and 291:
(John Chrysostom+). In expressions
- Page 292 and 293:
also caɫrik haw `a kind of mew/gul
- Page 294 and 295:
the -an-, cf. Meɫri na�nil [Aɫa
- Page 296 and 297:
metathesis e...u > u...e. Here Agul
- Page 298 and 299:
yields Arm. Rt`. Next to this, ther
- Page 300 and 301:
Further: kaɫamah/x in Galen (rende
- Page 302 and 303:
erdumn `oath' > �arabaɫ u��r
- Page 304 and 305:
96-97). Thus, the sound corresponde
- Page 306 and 307:
����ETYM ETYM No etymologic
- Page 308 and 309:
Olsen (1999: 939, cf. 462) places k
- Page 310 and 311:
Gr. ������, -���
- Page 312 and 313:
Compare also kiw `tree pitch, masti
- Page 314 and 315:
����ETYM ETYM Found and int
- Page 316 and 317:
etymologies), Arm. *kic- `to bite'
- Page 318 and 319:
kiw, kiw kiw kiw o-stem `tree pitch
- Page 320 and 321:
YAv. gaoiia- `coming from cattle, c
- Page 322 and 323:
indeed seen in Zeyt`un (Cilicia) u
- Page 324 and 325:
that ku�s does exist independentl
- Page 326 and 327:
Karnec`i (Karin/Xotorj�ur): k`alt
- Page 328 and 329:
In a medieval riddle [Mnac`akanyan
- Page 330 and 331:
In view of the vocalism it is hard
- Page 332 and 333:
krkin, krkin krkin krkin o-stem (IS
- Page 334 and 335:
*kul----: *kul *kul *kul : klanem k
- Page 336 and 337:
dialect a word has no "full" vowel
- Page 338 and 339:
����ETYM ETYM From PIE *ph2
- Page 340 and 341:
(головка)'. A‰ar�yan (19
- Page 342 and 343:
Morani (1991: 178) cautiously menti
- Page 344 and 345:
Apparently, the initial h- of haraw
- Page 346 and 347:
According to A‰ar�yan, the basi
- Page 348 and 349:
protect', etc. This verbal root is
- Page 350 and 351:
This etymology is attractive. Howev
- Page 352 and 353:
squeze'. It is also possible to tre
- Page 354 and 355:
I conclude that *hiwsi(n) `avalanch
- Page 356 and 357:
*hol(----an) *hol( *hol( *hol( an)-
- Page 358 and 359:
In T`ovmay Arcruni (9-10th cent.) o
- Page 360 and 361:
containing another *o (see 2.1.3).
- Page 362 and 363:
Once in 12th century medical litera
- Page 364 and 365:
J�ahukyan (ibid.), though with re
- Page 366 and 367:
����DIAL DIAL Preserved in
- Page 368 and 369:
‰ana‰`em seems to be the best s
- Page 370 and 371:
However, the existence of this PIE
- Page 372 and 373:
(RV+); Gr. ��������
- Page 374 and 375:
For the element *-u- cf. Arm. GPl m
- Page 376 and 377:
Only attested in the compounds mgla
- Page 378 and 379:
Only attested in John Chrysostom: O
- Page 380 and 381:
me meɫ( me meɫ(----k`) ɫ( ɫ( k`
- Page 382 and 383:
mit, mit mit mit a-stem; frequently
- Page 384 and 385:
����ETYM ETYM Compared with
- Page 386 and 387:
Arm. mor-eni (GDSg morenw-o-y, LocS
- Page 388 and 389:
�, f. `black mulberry-tree', Wels
- Page 390 and 391:
Frisk (2: 256) sees Greek as a poss
- Page 392 and 393:
Arm. Polis/Stambul *mor�mor�oz,
- Page 394 and 395:
Further: S�amaxi mɔrmɔrinj� `
- Page 396 and 397:
According to NHB 2: 315c, i- or o-s
- Page 398 and 399:
Sarad�eva 1986: 225-226), and the
- Page 400 and 401:
disappear' [HayLezBrbBar� 1, 2001
- Page 402 and 403:
etymological?) identity of Arm. *y-
- Page 404 and 405:
Attested in Movse�s Xorenac`i 3.5
- Page 406 and 407:
(see Schrijver 1991: 497-498). A PI
- Page 408 and 409:
1897: 478; HAB 3: 438b; J�ahukyan
- Page 410 and 411:
paradigm: nom. *indir, acc. *indera
- Page 412 and 413:
The etymology is worth of considera
- Page 414 and 415:
thunder/strike furiously'? cf. bark
- Page 416 and 417:
etc. (Bugge 1893: 57). According to
- Page 418 and 419:
elsewhere. Olsen (1999: 195362) onl
- Page 420 and 421:
����DIAL DIAL Widespread in
- Page 422 and 423:
away the devils, harassed the �i
- Page 424 and 425:
glory and great splendor" (note the
- Page 426 and 427:
esembling olor�' = Pers. holar be
- Page 428 and 429:
The Balto-Slavic forms derive from
- Page 430 and 431:
dialect of J�uɫa, the actual mea
- Page 432 and 433:
`orphan' (see, for instance, E�ti
- Page 434 and 435:
-c-". However, I subscribe to the v
- Page 436 and 437:
compare Engl. deer. Another example
- Page 438 and 439:
ppppal al al al `rock', only in "Ha
- Page 440 and 441:
In classical sources such as the Bi
- Page 442 and 443:
One might also hypothetically posit
- Page 444 and 445:
����ETYM ETYM A‰ar�yan
- Page 446 and 447:
where only �arabaɫ is mentioned.
- Page 448 and 449:
in Eɫi�e�, Anania S�irakac`i
- Page 450 and 451:
(Lide�n 1905; 1933: 454; HAB 4: 1
- Page 452 and 453:
����ETYM ETYM Since NHB 2:
- Page 454 and 455:
notes that the -w- in siwn (= *siun
- Page 456 and 457:
thoroughly HAB 4: 283-284; J�ahuk
- Page 458 and 459:
sok�o, Svan sok�(w) `id.'; as w
- Page 460 and 461:
e/make clean' (RV+), and derived fr
- Page 462 and 463:
viz, viz viz viz i- or a-stem: GDSg
- Page 464 and 465:
*g^(e�)lh2-o�u-s; the form tal
- Page 466 and 467:
expenditure'. Olsen (1999: 101) alt
- Page 468 and 469:
OEngl. titt, Engl. teat, Germ. Zitz
- Page 470 and 471:
eating clothes' (Eusebius of Caesar
- Page 472 and 473:
����DIAL DIAL T`iflis c`nja
- Page 474 and 475:
uɫɔ�ɫ (in two villages; in the
- Page 476 and 477:
The etymological meaning of uɫ-eɫ
- Page 478 and 479:
cups, etc.', Av. u�i (dual) `ears
- Page 480 and 481:
In P`awstos Buzand 5.6 (1883=1984:
- Page 482 and 483:
the root knik` `stamp; baptism', wi
- Page 484 and 485:
Frozen plural instrumental: �arab
- Page 486 and 487:
`son', Lat. f�lius `son', etc. Th
- Page 488 and 489:
Aɫayan (1974: 64) connects with La
- Page 490 and 491:
If the Sanskrit and Latin forms all
- Page 492 and 493:
����ETYM ETYM No acceptable
- Page 494 and 495:
(as an inner-Armenian development r
- Page 496 and 497:
In Psalms found twice with the syno
- Page 498 and 499:
����DIAL DIAL Trapizon *k`a
- Page 500 and 501:
yellowish brown'. This is attractiv
- Page 502 and 503:
French transl. Degarou (p. 39)]; A.
- Page 504 and 505:
According to Hu�bschmann (1904: 4
- Page 506 and 507:
1987: 584, developing the idea of N
- Page 508 and 509:
lit. `honey-river'; = Turkish Kara-
- Page 510 and 511:
����ETYM ETYM Usually inter
- Page 512 and 513:
����ETYM ETYM Clearly compo
- Page 514 and 515:
512
- Page 516 and 517:
`wind; (evil) spirit' (q.v.), and p
- Page 518 and 519:
in Aɫuank`; 2) a left tributary of
- Page 520 and 521:
edition we find ‰əɫj�ikan ins
- Page 522 and 523:
K`esab, one may assume that the dia
- Page 524 and 525:
A more recent borrowing from Pers.
- Page 526 and 527:
MPers. *ba�zu�k `arm' (cf. Pers
- Page 528 and 529:
Abeɫyan (Abeghian 1899: 61) distin
- Page 530 and 531:
1.12.2 1.12.2 1.12.2 brut, brut bru
- Page 532 and 533:
Maraɫa*‰ltik [HAB 3: 205a]. In K
- Page 534 and 535:
ule out the possibility that the so
- Page 536 and 537:
Originally, Arm. ayt `cheek' may ha
- Page 538 and 539:
Moks *m�ɫawil next to *n�waɫi
- Page 540 and 541:
17.6, mo�-i, etc.) and probably p
- Page 542 and 543:
sing', etc. Compare Arm. dial. onom
- Page 544 and 545:
initial k- and x- are due to contam
- Page 546 and 547:
MPers. rang `colour, dye'; further,
- Page 548 and 549:
According to Beekes (1988: 77; 2003
- Page 550 and 551:
For the phonetic discussion of the
- Page 552 and 553:
Arabkir, Polis, Karin etc. kas-karm
- Page 554 and 555:
27-29 (*dw- > *rkw-> erk-); Szemere
- Page 556 and 557:
2.1.22.11 2.1.22.11 PIE PIE ****---
- Page 558 and 559:
ert`am, maɫt`em, etc., which may b
- Page 560 and 561:
Dissimilation in the opposite direc
- Page 562 and 563:
Also internal factors must be dealt
- Page 564 and 565:
A possible typological parallel: Th
- Page 566 and 567:
In the light of what has been said,
- Page 568 and 569:
melt' > ha�ylil. One may explain
- Page 570 and 571:
Before Before a a labial labial sto
- Page 572 and 573:
-r-, as is explicitly pointed out b
- Page 574 and 575:
hangoyc` `knot' > dial. *hangust [H
- Page 576 and 577:
a(r)celi `razor' (Bible+; widesprea
- Page 578 and 579:
Allegro forms occur frequently in c
- Page 580 and 581:
and in the dialects of Akn, Xarberd
- Page 582 and 583:
More evidence can be obtained from
- Page 584 and 585:
have been preserved in Armenian man
- Page 586 and 587:
(402 L8 , 405 L-8 , 407 L-1,-4 , 40
- Page 588 and 589:
day' (lit. `by sun') and lost lisni
- Page 590 and 591:
Gr. ������, OCS zъlъv
- Page 592 and 593:
and Kar‰ewan irik` y ɛ�n, but
- Page 594 and 595:
*luc-ali [if lucatli is a corruptio
- Page 596 and 597:
of Gr. ������� < *�
- Page 598 and 599:
probably of Mediterranean origin, s
- Page 600 and 601:
`snail'; cf. also Arm. xr�nj�ay
- Page 602 and 603:
trace the anlaut of e.g. S�atax h
- Page 604 and 605:
Romance: ar� At`enay iskurhwoyn (
- Page 606 and 607:
in Greppin's list, such as aɫaɫak
- Page 608 and 609:
Classical and Middle Armenian, as w
- Page 610 and 611:
the Milky Way and is associated wit
- Page 612 and 613:
the metaphor of the mouse, the smal
- Page 614 and 615:
downwards into the mountain (see
- Page 616 and 617:
In both Indian and Iranian systems
- Page 618 and 619:
Composed as *apr < Pahl. abr `cloud
- Page 620 and 621:
Parth. tcr [*ta�ar] `palace, dwel
- Page 622 and 623:
*dui-h2p-o�-, lit. `having water
- Page 624 and 625:
For the alternation ‰ - z J�ahu
- Page 626 and 627:
Sanamer and Xor�xor� xanum seem
- Page 628 and 629:
meaning `hyena' and states several
- Page 630 and 631:
������� ����
- Page 632 and 633:
comment. As to the ape, note `evel
- Page 634 and 635:
As we have seen above, in the same
- Page 636 and 637:
Combining these semantic fields int
- Page 638 and 639:
`corpse'?) is unclear (R. Smeets, p
- Page 640 and 641:
s.v. tal `husband's sister'), thoug
- Page 642 and 643:
`stars'; see s.v. ar�astaɫ `ceil
- Page 644 and 645:
The word can be linked with *ktir `
- Page 646 and 647:
3.10 3.10 Miscellaneous Miscellaneo
- Page 648 and 649:
Mediterranean-Pontic and European s
- Page 650 and 651:
An Indo-European etymology of an Ar
- Page 652 and 653:
esembles gaylaxaz. According to Ama
- Page 654 and 655:
According to A. A. Abrahamyan (1986
- Page 656 and 657:
Hu�bschmann 1904: 387 and 462, re
- Page 658 and 659:
656
- Page 660 and 661:
1970 Ezniki erki bnagrayin mi k`ani
- Page 662 and 663:
1947 K`nnut`yun Ham�eni barbar�
- Page 664 and 665:
1985 On the chronology of Indo-Euro
- Page 666 and 667:
Mendel'son). Moscow: GRVLI "Nauka";
- Page 668 and 669:
1899 Arica XI. In IndogForsch 10: 1
- Page 670 and 671:
497-502. Benveniste, E�mile. 1927
- Page 672 and 673:
eve. In Fs Benveniste 1975 : 47-54.
- Page 674 and 675:
Society, 30). 2004-05 Review of Kor
- Page 676 and 677:
Darms, Georges 1978 Schwa�her und
- Page 678 and 679:
Dume�zil, G. 1938 Traitement de m
- Page 680 and 681:
1989 Kor‰aga iz Majkopskogo muzej
- Page 682 and 683:
Gabrie�lean, M. S. 1912 Aknay gaw
- Page 684 and 685:
1994 Die Glottaltheorie und die Fra
- Page 686 and 687:
Delmar, New York: Caravan Books. 19
- Page 688 and 689:
V. A. Hakobyan). Vol. 1, 1951; vol.
- Page 690 and 691:
2000 (eds.), Karos xa‰`: usumnasi
- Page 692 and 693:
1988a Hay-iranakan zugadipumner. In
- Page 694 and 695:
1987 Mi k`ani hnaguyn teɫanunneri
- Page 696 and 697:
1990 Hayereni anhayt cagman bar�a
- Page 698 and 699:
1930 Armeno-Pelasgica: Geschichte d
- Page 700 and 701:
ProcFICAL 1980 : 97-106. 1980a Alba
- Page 702 and 703:
1892 (Lalayeanc`), J�awaxk`i burm
- Page 704 and 705:
arme�nien classique. In Maurice L
- Page 706 and 707:
2001 The Indo-Iranian substratum. I
- Page 708 and 709:
1971 Barbar�ayin bar�eri meknut
- Page 710 and 711:
1992-2001 See EWAia. McNamara, Mart
- Page 712 and 713:
1924 Remarques e�tymologiques. In
- Page 714 and 715:
Press) 5: 187-202. 1995 Sivri-Hisar
- Page 716 and 717:
1962 S�ataxi barbar�ə. Yerevan
- Page 718 and 719:
2000 (eds.), 125 Jahre Indogermanis
- Page 720 and 721:
of Pedersen 1906 by H. T`ovmas Keti
- Page 722 and 723:
arxeologi‰eskoe otdelenie. 1.5. B
- Page 724 and 725:
Rapoport, Ju. A. 1971 Iz istorii re
- Page 726 and 727:
1932 Balu: ir sovoroyt`nerə, krt`a
- Page 728 and 729:
In Kratylos 17: 1-68. 1975 Von Bopp
- Page 730 and 731:
5: 80-93. Sokolova, Z. P, 1990 Solt
- Page 732 and 733:
Sve�nikova, T. N. 1979 Volki-obor
- Page 734 and 735:
5). 1985 Thomas Artsruni : History
- Page 736 and 737:
Rainer Degen). In Bayerische Akadem
- Page 738 and 739:
1998 Etymology and phonotactics: La
- Page 740 and 741:
on Armenian Linguistics, McGill Uni
- Page 742 and 743:
arbar�agitakan a�xatut`yunnerum
- Page 744 and 745:
Zeyt`unyan, A. S. 1985 Ziegler, Jos
- Page 746 and 747:
Ar�Oɫomp 1854 - Ar�akk` Oɫomp
- Page 748 and 749:
Hayrens : see Mnac`akanyan 1995. He
- Page 750 and 751:
(ed.) with the assistance of K. Mel
- Page 752 and 753:
California Press. AnnArmLing Annual
- Page 754 and 755:
(Beihefte zum Tu�binger Atlas des
- Page 756 and 757:
(eds.), Me�langes linguistiques o
- Page 758 and 759:
Moscow: GRVLI "Nauka". Go�tHo�g
- Page 760 and 761:
JourIndEurStud Journal of Indo-Euro
- Page 762 and 763:
Larson, coedited by C. Scott Little
- Page 764 and 765:
RicLing Ricerche linguistiche. Roma
- Page 766 and 767:
764
- Page 768 and 769:
766