An urgent plea for a broader understanding and awareness of the unconsidered dangers of new genetic technologies
David M. Goldstein Books






Proceedings of the 32nd Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference
November 5th, 6th, and 7th, 2021
The Program in Indo-European Studies at UCLA hosts an Annual Indo-European Conference, inviting linguists, philologists, and scholars involved in various aspects of the field. These Proceedings feature papers from the Thirty-Second Annual Conference, conducted online. Contributions include: a preface and works such as Michele Bianconi's exploration of Phrygian metre; Chiara Bozzone and Ryan Sandell's quantitative analysis of the Homeric question; Isabelle de Meyer’s investigation of Mycenaean and Greek connections; and Benjamin W. Fortson IV’s examination of the second singular aorist imperative in Armenian. José L. García Ramón discusses Greek infinitives, while Riccardo Ginevra delves into Indo-European deities of mobility, comparing Old Norse and Vedic Sanskrit. Other notable papers include Stefan Höfler’s analysis of Greek adjectives, Anahita Hoose's study on aorist stems in epic Sanskrit, and Ronald I. Kim's research on Ossetic verbal inflection. Jared S. Klein addresses double determination in Classical Armenian, Valentina Lunardi examines Old Irish object pronoun distribution, and Teigo Onishi investigates clitic doubling in Tocharian B. Zachary Rothstein-Dowden critiques the law of geminate sibilant occlusion in Indic, Andrei Sideltsev presents on Hittite syntax, and Anthony D. Yates discusses emergent mobility in Indo-European stems and its implications for neuter plural reconstruction.
Proceedings of the 30th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference
November 9th and 10th, 2018
The Program in Indo-European Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, sponsors an Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference. The Conference, held on campus every fall, welcomes participation by linguists, philologists, and others engaged in all aspects of Indo-European studies.
From the contents: 00Chiara Bozzone: Weaving Songs for the Dead in Indo-European: Women Poets, Funerary Laments, and the Ecology of *k?léuos / Andrea Lorenzo Covini: PIE *g??eh2-?to gape, open the mouth? / José L. García Ramón: Hera and Hero: Reconstructing Lexicon and God-names / Daniel Kölligan: PIE *h2ei?d-?to reveal? and its Descendants / Martin Kümmel: Is Ancient Old and Modern New? Fallacies of Attestation and Reconstruction (with Special Focus on Indo-Iranian) / Jesse Lundquist: On the Accentuation of Compound s-Stem Adjectives in Greek and Vedic / Laura Massetti: The Belly of an Indo-European: Some Greek and Iranian Cognates of PIE merg -?to divide, cut? / Teigo Onishi and Kanehiro Nishimura: Inseparable Etymologies: Latin crinis, Greek kopew, and Related Forms in Germanic.