Beech Stave Press, 2007. — 414 p.
Francoise Bader, Thème et variations sur l’ouverture de l’enclos.
Irene Balles, A Greek Laryngeal Metathesis That Needn’t Be Either.
Haraldur Bernharđsson, Old Icelandic
ragnarök and
ragnarökkr.
Claire Bowern, On Eels, Dolphins, and Echidnas: Nyulnyulan Prehistory through the Reconstruction of Flora and Fauna.
George Dunkel, Chips from an Aptotologist’s Workshop I.
Joseph F. Eska, A Regular Distant Assimilation and Some Anomalous n-Stem Genitive Singular Forms in Hispano-Celtic.
Michael S. Flier, The Fourth Palatalization of Velars in Ukrainian: The Southwestern Dialects.
Benjamin W. Fortson IV, The Origin of the Latin Future Active Participle.
Jose-Luis Garcia Ramon, A New lndo-European -u- Present and a Suppletive Pair in Greek.
Ives Goddard, Phonetically Unmotivated Sound Change.
Olavr Hackstein, Ablative Formations.
Stephanie W. Jamison, Vedic
Usana Kavya and Avestan
Kauui Usan. On the Morphology of the Names.
Joshua T. Katz, The Development of Proto-Indo-European *sm in Hittite.
Ronald I. Kim, The Tocharian Subjunctive in Light of the h
2e-Conjugation Model.
Sara Kimball, Hittite
ḫumānt- ‘all, entire, each”.
Jared Klein, Sequential Negation in the Rigveda.
Alexander Lubotsky, Sanskrit -na- Participles and the Glottalic Theory.
Melanie Malzahn, Tocharian Desire.
Мichael Meier-Brügger, Infinitiv-Formans *
-dʰi̯o.
H. Craig Melchert, PIE *
h2esp “to cut“.
Norbert Oettinger, Hieroglyphen-luwisch
latara/i- ,erweitern‘, ai.
randhra- und nhd.
Lende, Land.
Martin Peters,
ouk apithēse und
pithēsas.
Georges-Jean Pinault, A Star Is Born: A “New” PIE *
-ter— Suffix.
Jeremy Rau, The Derivational History of Proto-Germanic *
weðru- ‘larnb’.
Elisabeth Rieken, Lat.
eg-i ‘führte’,
iec-i “warf”.
und h.-luw. INFRA
a-ka ‘unterwarf’.
Don Ringe, Old Latin -
mino and “Analogy”.
Peter Schrijver, Notes on British Celtic: Comparatives and Their Syntax.
Prods Oktor Skjærvø, Avestica V: The Thematic Optative 3rd Plural in -aiaiien and the Instrumental Plural of n-Stems and Some Other Consonant Stems.
Guðrun Thórhallsdóttir,The Dative Singular of o-Sterns in Old Norse.
Brent Vine, Latin
gemo ‘groan’, Greek
gegōne ‘cry out”, and Tocharian A
ken- ‘Call’.
Calvert Watkins, Mycenean
e-u-te-re-u TH Ft 140.2 and the Suffixless Locative.
Michael Weiss, Cui bono? The Beneficiary Phrases of the Third Iguvine Table.
Kazuhiko Yoshida, The Morphological History of Hittite Mediopassive Verbs.
Index Verborurn.