<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Fertile Crescent / Ancient languages / Çorum Province / Mediterranean / Hittite language / Mitanni / Luwian language / Kizzuwatna / Syro–Hittite states / Anatolia / Asia / Hittites
Date: 2012-05-22 05:30:47
Fertile Crescent
Ancient languages
Çorum Province
Mediterranean
Hittite language
Mitanni
Luwian language
Kizzuwatna
Syro–Hittite states
Anatolia
Asia
Hittites

On the writing of Hittite History

Add to Reading List

Source URL: epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 884,13 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Grammatical aspect / Proto-Indo-European verbs / Lexical aspect / Grammatical tense / Lexical / Construction grammar / Valency / Hittite language

Verbal roots and lexical aspect in Hittite: a cognitive linguistics approach Guglielmo Inglese Università degli Studi di Pavia\Università di Bergamo Lexical aspect, also known as actionality or Aktionsart, is one of th

DocID: 1p2zf - View Document

Grammatical cases / Grammar / Linguistic typology / Word order / Accusative case / Argument / Copula / Nominative case / Subject / Object / Language / Nominativeaccusative language

Locating the Subject in Old Irish and Hittite: Position as a Behavioral Property of Subjects

DocID: 1oGB3 - View Document

(F) Take One Tablet and Call Me in the MorningHittite is an extinct language that belongs to the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family. It was spoken in the ancient Hittite Empire in second millenn

DocID: 1nMBn - View Document

(F) Take One Tablet and Call Me in the MorningHittite is an extinct language that belongs to the Anatolian branch of the Indo-European language family. It was spoken in the ancient Hittite Empire in second millenn

DocID: 1nmnc - View Document

Linguistic morphology / Indo-European linguistics / Germanic languages / Proto-Indo-European language / Parts of speech / Athematic stem / Causative / Laryngeal theory / Indo-European ablaut / Linguistics / Historical linguistics / Grammar

Hittite hi-verbs and the Indo-European perfect

DocID: 1apql - View Document