Robert Mailhammer
Dr. phil., M.A. (Munich)
Visiting Fellow
(Australian National University)
 
 

Publications

 

1. Books

2010



2007

Amurdak inyman - Amurdak language: Six stories in Amurdak told by Bill Neidjie and Nelson Mulurinj, Jabiru: Iwaidja Inyman [together with Robert Handelsmann]

The Germanic Strong Verbs: Foundations and Development of a New System, Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs 183, Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter

2. Edited volumes

in prep.


in prep.




in press

Linguistic Roots of Europe, Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press [co-edited with Theo Vennemann]

Selected Papers of the 15th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics, University of Munich, 24-30 August 2008, vol. II, Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins [co-edited with Judith Huber and Ursula Lenker]

Problems of English Historical Phonology, Anglia 127/2 (2009) [special issue; co-edited with Stephen Laker]

3. Articles and book chapters

in prep.


in prep.



in press


in press



in press


2009


2009





2008


2008


2007 




2007


2007



2006


2006



2003

Introduction: Investigating the linguistic prehistory of Europe, in Mailhammer & Vennemann (in prep.) [co-authored with Theo Vennemann]

Diversity vs. uniformity: Europe before the arrival of the Indo-European languages: a comparison with prehistoric Australia, in Mailhammer & Vennemann (in prep.) pdf

The prehistory of European languages, in: J. van der Auwera & B. Kortmann, Fields of Linguistics: Europe, Berlin/New York (2010): Mouton de Gruyter pdf

Die etymologische Forschung und Lehre zum Germanischen in Deutschland am Beginn des 21. Jahrhunderts, Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 15 (2010), 37-65 pdf

Thoughts on the genesis and the development of syllable cut in English, Anglia 127/2 (2009) , 261-282

Towards an aspect-based analysis of the verb categories of Amurdak, Australian Journal of Linguistics 29/3, 349-391

Adding typology to lexicostatistics: a combined approach to language classification, Linguistic Typology 13, 169 - 179[together with Dik Bakker, Oleg Belyaev, Cecil H. Brown, Pamela Brown, Dmitry Egorov, Anthony Grant, Eric W. Holman, Hagen Jung, André Müller, Viveka Velupillai, Søren Wichmann and Kofi Yakpo = ASJP consortium]

Ablaut variation in the Proto-Germanic noun: The long arm of the strong verbs, Sprachwissenschaft 33/1, 279-300

The wolf in sheep's clothing: Camouflaged Borrowing in Modern German, Folia Linguistica 42/1, 177-193

The Typological Significance of Ablaut in the (Pre-)history English,  in: W. Rudolf, T. Honegger & A. J. Johnston (eds.), Clerks, Wives, and Historians:  Essays on Medieval English Language and Literature, Bern: Peter Lang, 185-212  

Islands of Resilience: The history of the German strong verbs from a systemic point of view, Morphology 17/1, 77-108

On syllable cut in the Orrmulum, in: C. M. Cain, G. Russom (eds.), Studies in the History of the English Language III - Managing Chaos: Strategies for Identifying Change in English, Berlin / New York: de Gruyter, 37-61

On the Origin of the Germanic Strong Verb System, Sprachwissenschaft 31/1, 1-52  

'Werde der, der du bist!' - Die Figur des Zarathustra in Friedrich Nietzsches Dionysos-Dithyrambenwww.jungeforschung.de 
(http://www.jungeforschung.de/moderne/Mailhammer.pdf)

PGmc. *drepa-, Gm. treffen 'to hit', Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia 8, 103-110 [co-authored with Stephen Laker and Theo Vennemann]

3. Reviews

(in press)


2008



2005  


2004

Mechthild Habermann et al. (eds.), Historische Wortbildung des Deutschen, Tübingen (2002): Niemeyer, Word

Don Ringe, From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-
Germanic. A Linguistic History of English, vol. I. Oxford (2006): OUP, Anglia 126/1, 127-130

Kate Burridge, Blooming English. Observations on the roots, cultivation and hybrids of the English language, Cambridge (2004), LinguistList 16.654  

Saul Levin, Semitic and Indo-European II, Amsterdam/Philadelphia (2003), LinguistList 15.1554

4. Other works / Newspaper articles

2007


2004



2001

Australisches Sprachpuzzle, Die Welt, 6 September, 28 (http://www.welt.de/welt_print/article1161255/Australisches_Sprachpuzzle.html)

A Morphological and Etymological Study of the Germanic Strong Verbs, Doctoral Dissertation, Fakultät für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Etymologische Untersuchungen der Klassen I bis VI der starken Verben,M.A.Thesis, Fakultät für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München


 
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