User:Lëtzelúcia: Difference between revisions
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=== Etymology === | === Etymology === | ||
The first element is from Lëtzebuerg, Lutzburg, from Lucilinburhuc, ultimately from luzil + burg, from *lūtilaz + *burgz. The second element is from the feminine form of Lūcius, from *Loukjos, related to lux, stem lūc-. Compare 𐌋𐌖𐌂𐌉 | The first element is from Lëtzebuerg, Lutzburg, from Lucilinburhuc, ultimately from luzil + burg, from *lūtilaz + *burgz. The second element is from the feminine form of Lūcius, from *Loukjos, related to lux, stem lūc-. Compare 𐌋𐌖𐌂𐌉 and 𐌋𐌖𐌗𐌉. Ultimately meaning "little Lúcia". | ||
=== Pronunciation === | === Pronunciation === | ||
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=== Proper noun === | === Proper noun === | ||
# A Brazilian girl, of Nipo-Italian descent, who lives in | # A Brazilian girl, of Nipo-Italian descent, who lives in São Paulo. Mostly adds historical Indo-European related content, with emphasis on Anatolian. Belauds comparative linguistics and classical linguistics. | ||
# An enjoyer of the Luxembourgish language. | # An enjoyer of the Luxembourgish language. | ||
Revision as of 18:46, 2 March 2024
Lëtzelúcia
Alternative forms
- Lützel·Lúcia
Etymology
The first element is from Lëtzebuerg, Lutzburg, from Lucilinburhuc, ultimately from luzil + burg, from *lūtilaz + *burgz. The second element is from the feminine form of Lūcius, from *Loukjos, related to lux, stem lūc-. Compare 𐌋𐌖𐌂𐌉 and 𐌋𐌖𐌗𐌉. Ultimately meaning "little Lúcia".
Pronunciation
- lb
Proper noun
- A Brazilian girl, of Nipo-Italian descent, who lives in São Paulo. Mostly adds historical Indo-European related content, with emphasis on Anatolian. Belauds comparative linguistics and classical linguistics.
- An enjoyer of the Luxembourgish language.
Other
Fundamental Lecture
Books
- Old Frisian Etymological Dicitionary (Boutkan, Siebinga)
- Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon (Derksen)
- Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon (Kloekhorst)
- Etymological Dictionary of Latin (de Vaan)
- Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Beekes)
- Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Kroonen)
- A Concise Etymological Sanskrit Dictionary (Mayrhofer)
- A Dictionary of Tocharian B (Adams)
- A Handbook of Germanic Etymology (Orel)
- The Indo-European Puzzle Revisited (Kristiansen, Kroonen, Willerslev)
- Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture (Mallory, Adams)
- The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European (Mallory, Adams)
- The Luwians (Kloekhorst)
- The Handbook of Portuguese Linguistics (Wetzels, Menuzzi, Costa)
- The Indo-European Languages (Kapović)
- Ex Anatolia Lux (Melchert, Kim, Oettinger, Rieken, Weiss)
- Cuneiform Luvian Lexicon (Melchert)
- Anatolian Historical Phonology (Melchert)
- The Precursors of Proto-Indo-European (Kloekhorst, Pronk)
- Hittite and the Indo-European Verb (Jasanoff)
- Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics 1, 2, 3 (Klein, Joseph, Fritz)
- Sumerian Lexicon (Halloran)
- Sumerological Studies (Lieberman)
- A Sumerian Grammar and Chrestomathy (Langdon)
- A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian (Jagersma)
- Old Akkadian Writing and Grammar (Gelb)
- A Concise Dictionary of Akkadian (Black, George, Postgate)
- Handbook to Life in Ancient Mesopotamia (Bertman)
- The Babylonian Gilgamesh Epic 1, 2 (George)
Papers
- Anatolian evidence suggests that the Indo-European laryngeals *h₂ and *h₃ were uvular stops (Kloekhorst)
- Anatolian (Kloekhorst)
- Anatolian (Kortlandt)
- Anatolian Split (Kristiansen)
- Ejective stops in Hittite (Kloekhorst)
- Geminate Stops in Anatolian (Kloekhorst)
- Initial Laryngeals in Anatolian (Kortlandt)
- New interpretations in Lydian phonology (Kloekhorst)
- The Anatolian Dissimilation Rule Revisited (Cohen, Hyllested)