@article{Koelligan2021, author = {K{\"o}lligan, Daniel}, title = {Murmur, heat and bonds - on some words of magic and healing}, series = {Indogermanische Forschungen}, volume = {126}, journal = {Indogermanische Forschungen}, number = {1}, issn = {1613-0405}, doi = {10.1515/if-2021-006}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-250976}, pages = {107 -- 134}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The paper argues that a) Germanic *tauf/ƀra- (Germ. Zauber, etc.) is related to a root PIE *deu̯p- 'beat; make a hollow sound, resound' found in Greek δοῦπος 'thud', etc., b) Greek φάρμακον goes back to the root PIE *gʷʰer- 'heat' (Gk. θερμός, etc.) implying healing by fomentation, and c) Armenian hiwand 'sick', borrowed from Iranian, to PIE *sh₂ei̯- 'bind' relying on the notion of disease as a supernatural bond.}, language = {en} } @article{Koelligan2021, author = {K{\"o}lligan, Daniel}, title = {A note on Vedic cīti-}, series = {Indogermanische Forschungen}, volume = {126}, journal = {Indogermanische Forschungen}, number = {1}, issn = {1613-0405}, doi = {10.1515/if-2021-007}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-250986}, pages = {135 -- 140}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Vedic cīti-, attested in the Atharvaveda, is argued to be related to Av. ṣ̌āitī-, OP šiyāti- 'happiness' built to PIE *kʷi̯eh₁- 'to (come to) rest'.}, language = {en} } @book{MacedoKoelliganBarbieri2021, author = {Macedo, Jos{\´e} Marcos and K{\"o}lligan, Daniel and Barbieri, Pedro}, title = {Πολυώνυμοι - A Lexicon of the Divine Epithets in the Orphic Hymns}, edition = {1. Auflage}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, address = {W{\"u}rzburg}, isbn = {978-3-95826-154-9}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-155-6}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-220613}, publisher = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, pages = {260}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The Orphic Hymns consist of a prooemium and 87 hymns addressed to several deities in a late Orphic initiation of sorts. They were composed probably in Asia Minor during the second or third century CE. The bulk of these hymns are made up of divine epithets often linked together in chains of considerable length. The lexicon attempts to give a comprehensive account of the roughly 850 epithets, bringing together the most relevant information scattered in the scholarly literature and adding others from various sources (literary, epigraphic, lexicographic, scholia etc.) in order to provide an overview of their usage and the main details of their models.}, subject = {Orphica}, language = {en} } @article{LuraghiIngleseKoelligan2021, author = {Luraghi, Silvia and Inglese, Guglielmo and K{\"o}lligan, Daniel}, title = {The passive voice in ancient Indo-European languages: inflection, derivation, periphrastic verb forms}, series = {Folia Linguistica}, volume = {55}, journal = {Folia Linguistica}, number = {s42-s2}, issn = {0165-4004}, doi = {10.1515/flin-2021-2033}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-247034}, pages = {339 -- 391}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The IE languages developed different strategies for the encoding of the passive function. In some language branches, the middle voice extended to the passive function to varying extents. In addition, dedicated derivational formations arose in a number of languages, such as the Greek -ē-/-thē- aorist and the Indo-Aryan -ya-presents. Periphrastic formations involving a verbal adjective or a participle are also widely attested, and played an important role in the building of the passive paradigm in e.g. Romance and Germanic languages. As the periphrastic passive is also attested in Hittite alongside passive use of the middle, both strategies seem to be equally ancient. Some minor strategies include lexical passives and the extensive lability of verbs. A survey of possible strategies provides evidence for the rise of a disparate number of morphemes and constructions, and for their ongoing incorporation into the inflectional paradigms (paradigmaticization) of given languages, thus adding to our knowledge about cross-linguistic sources of passive morphology and grammaticalization processes involved.}, language = {en} }