Publications

“The syllable in a syntagmatic and paradigmatic perspective: The cuneiform writing in the II millennium B.C. in Near East and Anatolian”.  (2015)

Authors:
Cotticelli, Paola
Title:
“The syllable in a syntagmatic and paradigmatic perspective: The cuneiform writing in the II millennium B.C. in Near East and Anatolian”.
Year:
2015
Type of item:
Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Tipologia ANVUR:
Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Language:
Inglese
Format:
A Stampa
Book Title:
The Notion of Syllable Across History, Theories and Analysis.
Publisher:
Cambridge Scholars
ISBN:
978-1-4438-8054-1
Page numbers:
2-32
Keyword:
syllable, cuneiform, Hittite, writing system, graphematics, phonology, anatolian hieroglyphs
Short description of contents:
The ideal way to define the concept of syllable both in the languages and in the writing systems of the second millennium B.C. is to start from Sumerian. In the third millennium B.C., Sumerian had a complex writing system, logographic and syllabo-/morphographic, where the “syllable” may coincide with the lexical morpheme and/or with a bound (grammatical) morpheme. Due to the process of development, the Sumerian cuneiform writing system ended up with large phenomena of polyphony and homophony, providing, in turn, a fertile ground for allography. This complex system was used in other languages, mostly Semitic (like Akkadian) and Indo-European (like Hittite). For this reason, during the second millennium B.C. we observe the emergence of a number of different ‘cuneiform’ traditions with individual peculiarities. About the end of the second millennium B.C. we also find the foundations of Semitic semi-alphabetical writing systems, which will eventually spread all over the Mediterranean in the first millennium. We must however start with the prehistory of writing, starting from the evaluation of those artifacts understood as symbols or marks affixed to surfaces for communicative purposes, which did not yet constitutea writing system and yet confirm the conventional nature of the relationship between sign and language.
Product ID:
95547
Handle IRIS:
11562/957331
Last Modified:
October 26, 2022
Bibliographic citation:
Cotticelli, Paola, “The syllable in a syntagmatic and paradigmatic perspective: The cuneiform writing in the II millennium B.C. in Near East and Anatolian”. The Notion of Syllable Across History, Theories and Analysis.Cambridge Scholars2015pp. 2-32

Consulta la scheda completa presente nel repository istituzionale della Ricerca di Ateneo IRIS

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