-
Thurneysen's law is a
proposed sound law
concerning the
alternation of
voiced and
voiceless fricatives in
certain affixes in Gothic. It was
first posited...
-
Eduard Rudolf Thurneysen (14
March 1857 – 9
August 1940) was a
Swiss linguist and Celticist. Born in Basel,
Thurneysen studied classical philology in Basel...
- *-ow- > *-aw- > -av- (before stress), *-ōw- > *-āw- > -āv- is
known as
Thurneysen–Havet's law:
examples include: PIE *lowh₃ṓ > *lawō > lavō 'I wash' PIE...
- [citation needed] A
fourth hypothesis,
proposed by the
scholars Rudolf Thurneysen and
Joseph Vendryes, is that the
forms of the
letters derive from a numerical...
-
Eduard Thurneysen (1888–1974) was a
Swiss Protestant clergyman and theologian, who was an
important representative of
dialectical theology. Born in Walenstadt...
-
scholars active in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries, such as
Rudolf Thurneysen (1857–1940) and
Osborn Bergin (1873–1950).
Notable characteristics of...
- List of
Germanic languages Modern Gutnish Name of the
Goths Old
Gutnish Thurneysen's law
Vandalic language G. H. Balg: A
Gothic grammar with
selections for...
- m****cript (Bodleian
Library MS
Rawlinson B 487),: 34
though Rudolf Thurneysen refers to the
quality of this m****cript as "very poor".: 58 Portions...
- p. 50
Thurneysen, R. (1887). "Der Weg vom
dactylischen Hexameter zum
epischen Zehnsilber der Franzosen.". Zeitschr. f. rom. Phil. XI.
Thurneysen, p. 324...
-
Mediaeval Europe (Cambridge
University Press, 1982), pp. 168–178
Rudolf Thurneysen, "Das
Fasten beim Pfändungsverfahren",
Zeitschrift für
Celtische Philologie...