Article citationsMore>>

This is ll [l:] into [ɠɠ:] (l: > ɠɠ:). Regardless of the usage of [ɠɠ:] is namely bound to initial and medial position, it is taken here notwithstanding in virtue of its cacuminal nature. E.g. Lat. CABALLUS> Sar. caddu [‘kwaɠɠ:u]. As a title of anecdote, “caballus” is neither the classical nor the vulgar Latin word for “horse” but EQUUS. Related to the Gr. ϊππος, this would fit in the general and accepted rotation that there is to be found between [p] and [k] in Indo-European. In the opinion of the romanist J. Coromines “caballus” would rather be a loanword from a Gallic language that Latin incorporated by the second century BC. Cf. Coromines (1992), p. 647.

has been cited by the following article:

SCIRP Newsletter
Copyright © 2006-2026 Scientific Research Publishing Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Top