Craig Melchert On Calvert Watkins

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The Journal of Indo-European Studies

In Memoriam
Calvert Watkins

(*13 March 1933 20 March 2013)


Calvert Watkins, Distinguished Professor in Residence
of the Department of Classics and Program in Indo-
European Studies, University of California, Los Angeles,
died during the night of March 20, 2013, at his home in
Los Angeles. Having suffered from ill health for several
months, he appeared to be on his way to recovery at the
time of his death. He was born in Pittsburgh, March 13,
1933, son of Ralph James and Willye (Ward) Watkins. Both
his father, an economist who held a number of advisory
positions with the United States government, and his
mother were born in San Marcos, Texas, where Calvert also
spent several years of his childhood and which he called
home.
Calvert Watkins received both his A.B. degree and his
Ph.D. in Linguistics from Harvard University in 1954 and
1959 respectively. Also formational for his academic career
were his studies at the cole Pratique des Hautes tudes in
Paris 1954-55 and 1958 and at the Dublin Institute for
Advanced Studies, School of Celtic Studies 1957-58. A
junior fellow of the Society of Fellows at Harvard 1956-59,
he was appointed instructor there in 1959, assistant
professor in 1960, associate professor (with tenure) in
1962, and full professor in 1966. In 1989 he was appointed
the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Linguistics and the
Classics at Harvard, retiring in 2003 to join his wife
Stephanie Jamison, Professor of Indo-Iranian Languages
and Cultures, at the University of California, Los Angeles.
During his long tenure at Harvard, he served as Chair of
the Department of Linguistics for eleven years, most
recently 1985-91.
He taught at three Summer Institutes of the
Linguistic Society of America, including that of 1979 at
Calvert Watkins 507

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
the University of Salzburg, where he was the Hermann
and Clara Collitz Professor, and held visiting positions at
the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (twice),
Stanford University, and the cole Normale Suprieure
and Universit de la Sorbonne Nouvelle.
He was an Honorary Member of the Royal Irish
Academy (1968), a Fellow of the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences (1973), a Member of the American
Philosophical Society (1975), a Corresponding Fellow of
the British Academy (1987), and of the Acadmie des
Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Correspondant Etranger
(1990), Associ Etranger, Membre de lInstitut (1999). He
received a Senior Fellowship for Independent Study and
Research from the National Endowment for the
Humanities (1984-85) and was a Guggenheim Fellow
(1992). He served as president of the Linguistic Society of
America in 1988.
His scholarship, embodied in more than one hundred
and fifty publications stretching over more than half a
century, is characterized first of all by its remarkable
breadth, in multiple senses.
1
His research focused on the
history of the Indo-European languages, but his interest in
the nature of language and of language change was
boundless, and he did not hesitate to address fundamental
methodological issues of historical linguistics: the role of
typology (97), reconstruction techniques (123), extension
of the comparative method to poetics and culture (93, 120,
128), and areal diffusion (164). He was also able to
complete in 2011 a third revised edition of the widely
admired American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots
(191), whose introductory essay on Indo-European and
the Indo-Europeanspopularization in the very best
sense of the termhas introduced thousands of English-
speaking readers to the workings and results of Indo-
European studies. While he is best known for his study of
the Indo-European verb and of comparative mythology and
poetics, there is virtually no aspect of Indo-European
linguistics to which he did not make seminal contributions:
phonology (26, 27, 36, 64), nominal morphology (30, 58,

1
The numbers in the following summary are those of the accompanying
bibliography.
508 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
59, 60, 95), syntax (19, 23, 63, 75, 150, 160), and
language contact (29, 153, 165, 166, 168, 184, 186). His
conception of cultural reconstruction included besides
myth and poetics also comparative law (45, 74, 111). In
terms of the languages studied, he gave particular
attention to Celtic, Hittite, Greek, and Latin, but he also
published on topics in Indo-Iranian, Baltic, Slavic,
Germanic, and Tocharian, and his broad syntheses of the
history of the verb and comparative mythology and poetics
attest to his extensive knowledge of all major sub-families
of Indo-European.
A second hallmark of Calvert Watkins career
scholarship was his readiness to address problems from a
new, even radically new viewpoint and willingness to
advance novel, sometimes daring hypotheses in response
to them. This openness to new perspectives manifested
itself already in his dissertation on the sigmatic aorist
(published officially as 14 in 1962), where in addition to
the usual inductive method of historical reconstruction he
also introduced forward reconstruction (1962: 5) and
what has become enshrined as Watkins Law (1962: 90
96 et alibi): reanalysis of a functionally unmarked
member of a paradigm with an overt formal marker as
having rather a zero marker, followed by reshaping of the
entire paradigm on the basis of the new stem of the
founding member of the paradigm (for widespread
application of this principle see Koch 1995).
This attitude also enabled him to play a leading role
in the integration of the facts of Hittite and Tocharian
into the reconstruction of Proto-Indo-European, a task
that preoccupied the discipline in the second half of the
twentieth century. Along with Wolfgang Meid (1963), he
was led to propose a radically new reconstruction of the
PIE verbal system, one which relied at least as much, if not
more, on the facts of Insular Celtic and Hittite, as it did on
those of Indo-Iranian, Greek, and Latin, on which the
traditional model was largely built. In his introduction to
the Geschichte der indogermanischen Verbalflexion of 1969
(39), Watkins was quite explicit (1969: 21) about the need
to build on the tradition of predecessors by formulating
new hypotheses and theories, fully conscious of the fact
Calvert Watkins 509

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
that not all would survive the ongoing scholarly debate
without which there is no progress in science, citing with
approval similar sentiments of Christian Stang. Many years
later (in 155) he epitomized this view by borrowing the
phrase of the late Jochem Schindler: to be a productive
scholar, one needs to have Mut zum Irrtum (1999: 11-
12).
In the event, the most radical aspects of the Italo-
Celtic-Hittite model of the PIE verb did not stand the test
of time, nor did all the analyses of the Insular Celtic verb
offered in 1962. A meaningful implementation of a Zeit
und Raum Modell to replace the Stammbaum (cf. 1969: 17
in einem zeitlichen und rumlichen Kontinuum and
Meid 1975) also proved beyond our capabilities. However,
forward reconstruction is now an integral part of the
methodological arsenal of Indo-Europeanists, having
achieved lasting results in myriad applications. It is also
now widely acknowledged that Hittite (that is, Anatolian)
did not take part in some major common innovations of
the rest of the Indo-European family (including some in
the verbal system). Stated in Stammbaum terms, Anatolian
was the first sub-branch to become isolated from the rest,
and more than a few scholars now suppose that Tocharian
was the next, and that Italo-Celtic followed. Furthermore,
the view is now widespread (and growing) that what we
may term early Indo-European (the oldest PIE reached
by direct comparative reconstruction) was typologically
quite different from Vedic Sanskrit, Avestan, Homeric
Greek, and Latin, and that some of the morphological
complexity and fusional character of these languages is a
post-PIE development. It is hard to imagine the present
currency of these views in the field without the
revolution of the 1960s in which Calvert Watkins played
a leading role.
His own openness to new ideas included the ability to
change his mind, and one of the most important lessons
he taught his students was that one must never invest too
much of ones ego (much less ones sense of self-worth) in
any of ones hypotheses. When asked about something he
had written that he now rejected, he repeatedly cited with
relish a quotation he attributed to Rudolf Thurneysen:
510 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
Das, was ich da geschrieben habe, ist Quatsch. Refusing
ever to be imprisoned by his own previous claims, he
continued up to his death to expand his knowledge of and
refine his views about all aspects of Indo-European studies.
As he himself expressed it in characteristically plain
language, his interest in prehistoric and early Indo-
European speakers also vitally included not only how they
talked, but what they talked about. Hence his career-long
devotion to the study of what was once called Wrter und
Sachen. Virtually all of his etymological studies are
characterized by his close attention to the linguistic and
cultural context in which the attested words and their
putative etyma were used, and in many cases this context is
crucial to his overall demonstration. I cite among many
merely as personal favorites his delocutory account of
Latin sns guilty (35; see also the follow-up in 82),
NAM.RA GUD UDU in Hittite (88), and the remarkable
story behind Greek rxiw (68). The subtitle of the last
mentioned article linguistique, potique, et mythologie,
leads to the other area of Indo-European studies beyond
the verb for which Calvert Watkins will most be
remembered: comparative poetics and mythology. His
extension of the comparative method to the
reconstruction of Indo-European poetic formulae, metrics,
and stylistics and of mythological themes occupied him for
more than forty years, culminating (but not ending!) in
the monumental How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-
European Poetics of 1995 (135). In Chapter 2 of that work
he paid full homage to his many predecessors, but in his
insistence on the systematicity of poetic grammar, of
poetic language as a subset of ordinary language, and in
the almost boundless wealth of the pan-Indo-European
case studies with which he illustrated and justified his
methodological approach, he stands alone. Predictably, as
in the case of his linguistic studies, not every poetic or
mythological analysis has won universal acceptance, but it
is to him more than any other individual that we owe the
reemergence of comparative poetics and mythology in
current Indo-European studies.
With his gift for large-scale synthesis and willingness
to explore novel approaches, Calvert Watkins nevertheless
Calvert Watkins 511

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
firmly believed that the devil is in the details. All of his
linguistic analyses and hypotheses, from the most modest
individual word etymology to his grandest and boldest
reconstructed schemata rested on rock-solid philological
foundationsand he insisted that his students analyses
did likewise. Originality without proper grounding veers
easily into unbridled fantasy, and generalizations become
self-perpetuating dogma. In Watkins work an unwavering
reverence for the text forestalled any such tendencies.
He viewed recalcitrant facts that did not fit an analysis not
as inconveniences to be ignored, but as priceless clues to a
better solutionsomething to which he hoped his
students would contribute.
His teaching will be as great a legacy as his
scholarship. He advised or co-advised at least twenty
doctoral dissertations. Not all of these dealt with Indo-
European topics, but he trained many of the current
practicing Indo-Europeanists and historical linguists in
North America or their teachers (he lived to enjoy
meeting those he termed academic great-
grandchildren). His personal influence naturally
extended beyond his formal advisees. A founding member
of the East Coast Indo-European Conference in 1982, he
participated in all but three of its first thirty annual
meetings, and after his move to Los Angeles likewise was
active in the annual UCLA Indo-European conferences.
His genuine interest in others work and the openness of
his personality assured that students from programs
anywhere who met him at these and other conferences
received the benefits of his counsel.
Some characteristics of his teaching have been
alluded to above: insistence on sound philology and close
reading of texts, stressing the need for students to
formulate and defend meaningful hypotheses, and
inculcating the importance of being prepared to change
ones views. He preferred to teach these (and other)
things by example rather than overt instruction. We were
advised to read model analyses by master scholars and were
actively shown how to go about identifying and trying to
solve a linguistic problem (several of his published papers
began as classroom presentations). We then tried it
512 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
ourselves, received firm but patient criticism, and tried
again, gradually learning how to be a practicing scholar.
We were certainly taught a definite viewpoint on major
issues of Indo-European, with supporting arguments to
motivate it, but the emphasis was never on facts or
doctrine, but on how to think as historical linguists.
The preceding lines have attempted to summarize
Calvert Watkins impact as scholar and teacher. Those who
had the good fortune not only to meet him or hear him
lecture, but also to come to know him as friend and
colleague, can attest that his influence was greatly
enhanced due to his qualities as a human being: warmth,
openness, utter lack of pretension, genuine interest in
and respect for his interlocutor (regardless of station), rich
sense of humor, and irrepressible joie de vivre. For this
reason his legacy will live on not merely in the continuing
influence of his ideas, but above all in the hearts and
minds of the many whose lives he touched.

References

Koch, Harold
1995 The creation of morphological zeroes. In Geert Booij and
Jaap van Marle (eds.), Yearbook of Morphology 1994, 31-71.
Dordrecht/Boston/London: Kluwer.

Meid, Wolfgang
1963 Die indogermanischen Grundlagen der altirischen absoluten und
konjunkten Verbalflexion. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
1975 Probleme der rumlichen und zeitlichen Gliederung des
Indogermanischen. In Helmut Rix (ed.), Flexion und
Wortbildung. Akten der V. Fachtagung der Indogermanischen
Gesellschaft. Regensburg, 9.-14. September 1973, 204-19.
Wiesbaden: Reichert.

List of Publications: 1954-2014

1954
[1] Review of Kenneth Jackson, Language and History in Early
Britain: A chronological survey of the Brittonic languages first to
twelfth century A.D. Language 30:513-518.

1955
[2] The phonemics of Gaulish: the dialect of Narbonensis. Language
31:9-19.
Calvert Watkins 513

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013

1956
[3] A preliminary study of the history of the Old Irish primary -verbs.
For Roman Jakobson: Essays on the Occasion of his 60th Birthday 11
Oct. 1956, ed. by M. Halle et al., 613-621. The Hague: Mouton.

1957
[4] Latin martus. Studies Presented to Joshua Whatmough, ed. by E.
Pulgram, 277-281. The Hague: Mouton

1958
[5] Old Irish sernaid and related forms. riu 18:85-101.
[6] Review of J. Kurylowicz, L'apophonie en indo-europen. Language
34:381-398.

1959
[7] Studies in the Indo-European Origins of the Celtic Verb I. The
sigmatic aorist. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Ph.D.
Dissertation in Linguistics.
[8] The etymology of Old Irish ind-aim. Language 35:18-20.

1960
[9] Evidence for laryngeals in Balto-Slavic. Evidence for Laryngeals.
Working papers of a conference in Indo-European linguistics, May 7-8,
1957, ed. by W. Winter, 42-53. Austin, Texas: Dept. of Germanic
Languages, Univ. of Texas.
[10] Evidence for laryngeals in Italic. Ibid. 187-198.
[11] Notes on componential analysis of laryngeals. Ibid. 232-238.

1961
[12] Indo-European origins of a Celtic metre. Poetics/Poetyka/Poetika
I:99-ll7. Warsaw/Gravenhage: Mouton.
[13] Anatolian evidence on a Germano-Slavic isogloss: past passive
participles in *-e/ono- and the Hittite ordinal. International Journal
of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics 4:7-12.

1962
[14] Indo-European origins of the Celtic Verb I. The sigmatic aorist. Dublin:
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. (Published form of l959
Harvard University Ph.D. Dissertation).
[15] OCS jaru: Gk. zrs. International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and
Poetics 5:136-l37.
[16] The origin of the t- preterite. riu 19:25-38.
[17] Addendum: Transitive and intransitive in the Celtic preterite
passive, Slavic root aorist, and Germanic weak preterite. Ibid. 38-
46.
[18] Varia II. 1. Irish milchobur. 2. Old Irish -antar. Ibid. 114-118.

514 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
1963
[l9] Preliminaries to a historical and comparative analysis of the syntax
of the Old Irish verb. Celtica 6:1-49.
[20] Indo-European metrics and Archaic Irish verse. Ibid. 194-249.
[21] Review of O.J. L. Szemernyi, Trends and tasks in comparative
philology. Kratylos 8:203.

1964
[22] Old Irish cssaid. Etudes Celtiques 11:131-134.
[23] Preliminaries to the reconstruction of Indo-European sentence
structure. Proceedings of the 9th International Congress of Linguists,
Cambridge MA, ed. by H.G. Lunt, 1035-1045. The Hague: Mouton.

1965
[24] Notes on Celtic and Indo-European morphology and syntax. 1.
O.Ir. nache n- 'neque eam'. 2. On the syntax of the ordinal. Lochlann
3:286-297.
[25] Latin nox 'by night': a problem in syntactic reconstruction. Symbolae
linguisticae in honorem Georgii Kurylowicz, ed. by A. Heinz et al., 351-
358. (Prace Komisji Jezykoznawstwa 5.) Wroclaw/ Warszawa/
Krakw: Polska Akademia Nauk.
[26] Evidence in Balto-Slavic. Evidence for Laryngeals, ed. by W. Winter,
116-122 rev. ed. The Hague: Mouton.
[27] Evidence in Italic. Ibid. 18l-189.
[28] Review of Wolfgang Meid, Die indogermanischen Grundlagen
der altirischen absoluten und konjunkten Verbalflexion. Bulletin
de la Socit de Linguistique de Paris 60:69-71.

1966
[29] Italo-Celtic revisited. Ancient Indo-European dialects, ed. by H.
Birnbaum and J. Puhvel, 29-50. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University
of California Press.
[30] The Indo-European word for 'day' in Celtic, and related topics.
Trivium 1:102-120.
[31] The origin of the f-future. riu 20:67-81.
[32] An Indo-European construction in Greek and Latin. Harvard
Studies in Classical Philology 71:115-119.

1967
[33] Remarks on the genitive. To honor Roman Jakobson: Essays on the
occasion of his 70th birthday. Vol. 3:2191-2198. (Janua Linguarum,
Series Maior 33.) The Hague/Paris: Mouton.
[34] orn .i. orgon. Studia Celtica 2:99-100.
[35] Latin sns. Studies in Historical Linguistics in honor of George Sherman
Lane, ed. by W. W. Arndt et al., 186-194. (Univ. of North Carolina
Studies in Germanic Languages and Literature 58.) Chapel Hill:
Univ. of North Carolina Press.

Calvert Watkins 515

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
1968
[36] A further remark on Lachmann's law. Harvard Studies in Classical
Philology 74:55-65.
[37] On the family of arce, ark, and Hittite hark-. Harvard Studies in
Classical Philology 74:67-74.
[38] The Celtic masculine and neuter enclitic pronouns. Etudes
Celtiques 12:92-95.

l969
[39] Indogermanische Grammatik, herausgegeben von Jerzy Kurylowicz.
Band III: Formenlehre. Erster Teil: Geschichte der
indogermanischen Verbalflexion. Heidelberg: Carl Winter
Universittsverlag.
[40] A Latin-Hittite etymology. Language 45:235-242.
[41] On the prehistory of Celtic verb inflexion. riu 21:1-22.
[42] The Indo-European origin of English. The American Heritage
Dictionary of the English Language, xix-xx. New York: American
Heritage & Houghton Mifflin.
[43] Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans. Ibid. 1496-1502.
[44] Indo-European roots. Ibid. 1505-1550.

1970
[45] Studies in Indo-European legal language, institutions, and
mythology. Indo-European and Indo-Europeans, ed. by George
Cardona, Henry M. Hoenigswald and Alfred Senn, 321-354.
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
[46] Language of gods and language of men: remarks on some Indo-
European metalinguistic traditions. Myth and Law Among the Indo-
Europeans, ed. by Jaan Puhvel, 1-17. Berkeley: University of
California Press.
[47] Remarks on Baltic verb inflexion. Baltic Linguistics, ed. by Thomas
F. Magner and W. R. Schmalstieg, 165-170. University Park, PA:
Penn. State University Press.
[48] A case of non-chronological rule insertion. Linguistic Inquiry 1:525-
527.

1971
[49] Reprint of item 36 above. Generative Studies in Historical
Linguistics, ed. by Mria Tsiapera, 73-87. Edmonton/Champaign:
Linguistics Research, Inc.

1972
[50] Indo-European Studies, ed. by Calvert Watkins. Special Report to the
National Science Foundation. Cambridge, MA: Dept. of
Linguistics, Harvard University.
[51] Une dsignation indo-europenne de l'eau. Bulletin de la Socit de
Linguistique de Paris 68:1:39-46.
[52] An Indo-European word for 'dream'. Studies for Einar Haugen, ed.
by E.S. Firchow et al., 554-561. The Hague: Mouton.

516 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
l973
[53] An Indo-European agricultural term: Lat. ador, Hitt. hat-. Harvard
Studies in Classical Philology 77:187-193.
[54] Etyma Enniana (1. uege 2. ceu). Harvard Studies in Classical Philology
77:195-206.
[55] Hittite and Indo-European Studies: the denominative statives in
--. Transactions of the Philological Society 1971:51-93.
[56] Language and its history. Daedalus 102/3:99-111.
[57] Latin suppus. Papers on italic topics presented to James Wilson
Poultney. Journal of Indo-European Studies 1:394-399.
[58] 'River' in Celtic and Indo-European. riu 24:80-89.

l974
[59] 'god'. Antiquitates Indogermanicae. Studien zur indogermanischen
Altertumskunde und zur Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte der
indogermanischen Volker. Gedenkschrift fr Hermann Gntert, ed. by M.
Mayrhofer et al., 101-110. (Innsbrucker Beitrge zur
Sprachwissenschaft 12.) Innsbruck: Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft.
[60] Indo-European 'star'. Die Sprache 20:10-l4.
[61] Review of J. Grothus: Die Rechtsordnung der Hethiter. Kratylos
19:63-71.

1975
[62] Indo-European Studies II, ed. by Calvert Watkins. Cambridge, MA:
Dept. of Linguistics, Harvard University.
[63] Some Indo-European verb phrases and their transformations.
Mnchener Studien zur Sprachwissenschaft 33:89-109.
[64] Die Vertretung der Laryngale in gewissen morphologischen
Kategorien in den indogermanischen Sprachen Anatoliens. Flexion
und Wortbildung, Akten der 5. Fachtagung der Indogermanischen
Gesellschaft, ed. by H. Rix, 358-378. Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig
Reichert Verlag.
[65] Latin iouiste et le vocabulaire religieux indo-europen. Mlanges
Linguistiques offerts Emile Benveniste, ed. by M. Dj. Monfar, 527-
534. Paris: Socit de Linguistique.
[66] Lat. ador, Hitt. hat-, Addenda to Harvard Studies in Classical
Philology 77, 1973:187-193. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology
79:181-187.
[67] La dsignation indo-europenne du tabou. Langues, discours,
socit. Pour Emile Benveniste, ed. by J. C. Millner et al., 208-214.
Paris: Editions du Seuil.
[68] La famille indo-europenne de grec rkhis: linguistique,
potique, et mythologie. Bulletin de la Socit de Linguistique de
Paris 70/1:11-26.

1976
[69] The etymology of Irish dan. Studies in Memory of Myles Dillon, ed by
D. Green and B.O. Cuv. Celtica 11:270-277.
[70] Observations on the 'Nestor's cup' inscription. Harvard Studies in
Classical Philology 80:25-40.
Calvert Watkins 517

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
[71] Syntax and metrics in the Dipylon vase inscription. Studies in Greek,
Italic, and Indo-European Linguistics, offered to Leonard R. Palmer on
the occasion of his 70th birthday, ed. by A. Morpurgo Davies and W.
Meid, 431-441. Innsbrucker Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft 16.
Innsbruck: Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft.
[72] Varia I: 1. A Hittite-Celtic Etymology. riu 27:116-119.
[73] Irish tindabrad. riu 27:119-122.
[74] Sick-maintenance in Indo-European. riu 27:21-25.
[75] Towards Proto-Indo-European Syntax: problems and pseudo-
problems. Papers from the Parasession on Diachronic Syntax, ed. by S.
Steever et al., 305-326. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society,
University of Chicago.
[76] Response [to Paul Kiparsky, writing in same volume]. Oral
Literature and the Formula, ed. by B.A. Stolz and R.S. Shannon,
Center for the Coordination of Ancient and Modern Studies, 107-
111. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

1977
[77] Indo-European Studies III, ed. by Calvert Watkins. Cambridge, MA:
Dept. of Linguistics, Harvard University.
[78] A propos de MHNIS. Bulletin de la Socit de Linguistique de Paris
72:1:187-209.

1978
[79] ansteos hn pda tndei. Etrennes de Septantaine. Travaux de
linguistique et de grammaire compare offerts Michel Lejeune par un
groupe de ses leves, 231-235. (Etudes et Commentaires 91.) Paris:
Editions Klincksieck.
[80] A Palaic carmen. Linguistic and literary studies in honor of Archibald
A. Hill, ed. by M. A. Jazayery et al., 3:305-314. The Hague: Mouton.
[81] Let us now praise famous grains. Proceedings of the American
Philosophical Society 122:9-17.
[82] On confession in Slavic and Indo-European. Studies in honor of
Horace G. Lunt, ed. by E. Scatton et al., Folia Slavica 2:340-359.
[83] Varia III:Old Irish cl and cleth 'housepost'. riu 29:155-60.
[84] Varia III: In essar dam do ?. riu 29:161-165.
[85] Remarques sur la mthode de Ferdinand de Saussure
comparatiste. Cahiers Ferdinand de Saussure 32:59-69.

1979
[86] Old Irish saithe, Welsh haid: etymology and metaphor. Etudes
Celtiques 16:191-194.
[87] Is tre fr flaithemon: marginalia to Audacht Morainn. riu 30:181-
198.
[88] NAM.RA GUD UDU in Hittite: Indo-European poetic language
and the folk taxonomy of wealth. Hethitisch und Indogermanisch.
Vergleichende Studien zur historischen Grammatik und zur
dialektgeographischen Stellung der indogermanischen Sprachgruppe
Altkleinasiens, ed. by W. Meid and E. Neu, 269-287. (Innsbrucker
Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft 25.) Innsbruck: Institut fr
Sprachwissenschaft.
518 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies

1980

[89] Review note of F. Sommer-Pfister, Handbuch der lateinischen
Laut- und Formenlehre. Eine Einfhrung in das
sprachwissenschaftliche Studium des Lateins. 4. Aufl., Vol. 1. R.
Pfister, Einleitung und Lautlehre. Classical World 74:38-39.
[90] Review note of E. Pulgram: Italic, Latin, Italian 600 B.C. to A.D.
1260: Texts and Commentaries. Classical World 74:35.

1981
[91] Indo-European Studies IV, ed. by Calvert Watkins. Cambridge, MA:
Dept. of Linguistics, Harvard University.
[92] Hittite harziyalla-. Bono Homini Donum: Essays in historical linguistics
in memory of J. Alexander Kerns, ed. by Y. Arbeitman and A. Bomhard,
345-348. (Amsterdam Studies in the Theory and History of
Linguistic Science 4.)Amsterdam: Benjamins.
[93] Language, culture, or history? Papers from the Parasession on
Language and Behavior, ed. by C. S. Masek et al., 238-248. Chicago:
Chicago Linguistic Society, University of Chicago.

1982
[94] Aspects of Indo-European poetics. The Indo-Europeans in the Fourth
and Third Millennia, ed. by E. Polom, 104-120. (Linguistica
Extranea, Studia 14.) Ann Arbor: Karoma Publishers, Inc.
[95] Notes on the plural formations of the Hittite neuters.
Investigationes Philologicae et Comparativae. Gedenkschrift H.
Kronasser, ed. by E. Neu, 250-262. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
[96] A Greco-Hittite etymology. Serta Indogermanica. Festschrift fr
Gnter Neumann zum 60. Geburtstag, ed. by J. Tischler, 455-457.
(Innsbrucker Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft 40.) Innsbruck:
Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft.
[97] New directions in Indo-European: historical comparative
linguistics and its contribution to typological studies. Proceedings of
the XIII International Congress of Linguists, ed. by S. Hattori and K.
Inoue, 270-277. Tokyo: Sanseido Book Store, Ltd.

1983
[98] Review of N. Oettinger: Die Stammbildungen des hethitischen
Verbums. Journal of the American Oriental Society 103:473-474.
[99] [ Roman Jakobson]:Memorial Church, Harvard University,
October 13, 1982. A Tribute to Roman Jakobson, 1896-1982, 78-80.
Berlin/New York: Mouton.
[100] Roman Jakobson and Slavic Mythology. Symposium to Honor Roman
Jakobson, MIT, November 12, 1982. International Journal of Slavic
Linguistics and Poetics 27: Supplement, 38-45. (Also in A Tribute to
Roman Jakobson, 39-46. Berlin/New York: Mouton.
[101] [ David Greene.] Cited in P. MacCana, riu 34:9.
[102] 'Blind' in Celtic and Romance. riu 34:113-116.

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1984
[103] L'apport d'Emile Benveniste la grammaire compare. E.
Benveniste aujourd'hui, Actes du Colloque international du C.N.R.S.,
Universit Franois Rabelais, Tours, 28-30, septembre l983, ed. by G.
Serbat. Vol. 1:3-11. Louvain: Editions Peeters.

1985
[104] Indo-European *-kwe 'and' in Hittite. Sprachwissenschaftliche
Forschungen. Festschrift fr Johann Knobloch, ed. by H.M. lberg and
G. Schmidt, 491-497. (Innsbrucker Beitrge zur
Kulturwissenschaft 23.) Innsbruck: Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft
[105] Hittite and European Studies II. Festgabe fr Karl Hoffman, ed. by B.
Forssman and J. Narten, Mnchener Studien zur
Sprachwissenschaft, 45:245-255.
[106] The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots, revised and
edited by Calvert Watkins. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
[107] Greek menoinai: a dead metaphor. Festschrift for Eric Pratt Hamp,
ed. by Michael Silverstein. International Journal of American
Linguistics 5l/4:614-618.
[108] [ Warren Cowgill.] Memorial service, Yale University. Privately
circulated. September 28, 1985.

1986
[109] The language of the Trojans. Troy and the Trojan War. A Symposium
held at Bryn Mawr College, October 1984, ed. by Machteld Mellink,
45-62. Bryn Mawr, PA: Bryn Mawr College.
[110] The name of Meleager. o-o-pe-ro-si: Festschrift fr Ernst Risch zum 75.
Geburtstag, ed. by A. Etter, 320-328. Berlin: deGruyter.
[111] 'In the interstices of procedure': Indo-European legal language
and comparative law. Historiographia Linguistica 13:1:27-42.

1987
[112] 'In the interstices of procedure': Indo-European legal language
and comparative law. Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz, ed.
Wolfgang Meid, 305-314. (Innsbrucker Beitrge zur
Sprachwissenschaft 52.) Innsbruck: Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft.
[113] Two Anatolian forms: Palaic askummuwa-, Cuneiform Luvian wa-
a-ar-sa. Festschrift for Henry Hoenigswald on the Occasion of his 70th
Birthday, ed. by G. Cardona and N. Zide, 399-404. Tbingen:
Gunther Narr Verlag.
[114] Questions linguistiques de potique, de mythologie et de
prdroit en indo-europen. Lalies 5:3-29.
[115] Linguistic and archeological light on some Homeric formulas.
Proto-Indo-European: the Archeology of a Linguistic Problem. Studies
in Honor of Marija Gimbutas, ed. by Susan N. Skomal and Edgar C.
Polom. Journal of Indo-European Studies 18:286-298.
[116] Questions linguistiques palates et louvites cuniformes. Acta
Anatolica Emmanuel Laroche oblata. (Colloque Anatolien, Paris, l-5
juillet, l985), ed. R. Lebrun, Hethitica VIII, 423-426.
(Bibliotheque des Cahiers de l'Institut de Linguistique de
520 In Memoriam

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Louvain 37.) Louvain/Paris: Editions Peeters.
[117] Studies in Memory of Warren Cowgill (l929-l985); Papers from the
Fourth East Coast Indo-European Conf., Cornell Univ., June 6-9, 1985,
ed. Calvert Watkins. Berlin: deGruyter.
[118] How to kill a dragon in Indo-European. Studies in Memory of Warren
Cowgill (1929-1985), ed. by Calvert Watkins, 270-299. Berlin:
deGruyter.

1988
[119] The Indo-European background of a Luvian ritual. Festschrift fr
Manfred Mayrhofer. Die Sprache 32/2, l986 [1988]:324-333.

1989
[120] New parameters in historical linguistics, philology, and culture
history. Language 65:783-799.
[121] Preface to Sandra R. Robinson, Origins, xiii-xiv. New York:
Teachers and Writers Collaborative.

1990
[122] What is Philology? Special-focus issue: What is Philology?
Comparative Literature Studies 27:21-25.
[123] Etymologies, equations, and comparanda: Types and values, and
criteria for judgment. Linguisitic Change and Reconstruction
Methodology, ed. Philip Baldi, 289-303. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
[124] Some Celtic phrasal echoes. Celtic Language, Celtic Culture,
Festschrift for Eric P. Hamp, ed. by A. Matonis and D. Melia, 47-56.
Van Nuys: Ford & Bailie.

1991
[125] Latin tarentum Accas, the ludi Saeculares, and Indo-European
eschatology. Language Typology 1988, ed. by Winfred P. Lehmann
and Helen-Jo Jakusz Hewitt, 135-47. (Current Issues in Linguistic
Theory 81.) Amsterdam: Benjamins.
[126] A Celtic-Latin-Hittite etymology. Lingering Over Words: Studies
in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honor of William L. Moran, ed.
by Tzvi Abusch, J. Huehnergard, Piotr Steinkeller, 451-453.
(Harvard Semitic Studies 37.) Atlanta: Scholars Press.
[127] Reprint of 123 in Patterns of Change, Change of Patterns, ed. by P.
Baldi, 167-181. Berlin, Mouton de Gruyter.

1992
[128] The comparison of formulaic sequences. Reconstructing Languages
and Cultures, ed. By Edgar C. Polom, 391-418. Berlin / New York:
Mouton de Gruyter.
[129] Historical linguistics and culture history. Oxford International
Encyclopedia of Linguistics, ed. by William Bright, vol. 1:318 - 22.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
[130] Indo-European languages. Oxford International Encyclopedia of
Linguistics, ed. by William Bright, vol. 2:206-12. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Calvert Watkins 521

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[131] Stylistic reconstruction. Oxford International Encyclopedia of
Linguistics, ed. by William Bright, vol. 4:86-9. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
[132] Appendix: Indo-European Roots. Third Rev. Ed. The American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Third Ed., 2081-2134.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
[133] The Indo-European origin of English. Ibid. xxiv-xxv.
[134] Le dragon hittite Illuyankas et le gant grec Typheus. Acadmie
des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. Comptes rendus des sances de lanne
1992, 319-330. Paris: de Boccard.

1993
[135] Il proto-indoeuropeo. Le lingue indoeuropee, ed. by Anna Giacalone
Ramat and Paolo Ramat, 45-93. Bologna: Il Mulino.
[136] Review of Jadranka Gvozdanovic (ed.), Indo-European Numerals.
Diachronica 10:127-130.
[137] Some Anatolian words and forms. Indogermanica et Italica.
Festschrift fr Helmut Rix, ed. By G.Meiser, 469-478. Innsbruck:
Institut fr Sprachwissenschaft.
[138] Another thorny problem. Linguistica 33. Bojan op septuagenario
in honorem oblata, 243-248. Ljubljana.

1994
[139] Selected Writings. vol. I. Language and Linguistics, vol II. Culture and
Poetics. ed. by Lisi Oliver. Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beitrge zur
Sprachwissenschaft, Band 80. Pp. xvi + 771.

1995
[140] How to Kill a Dragon. Aspects of Indo-European Poetics. Oxford and
New York: Oxford University Press. Pp. xiii + 613.
[141] Hittite nega-, negna-, Luvian *niya-, nani-. Festschrift fr Klaus Strunk,
ed. H. Hettrich, W. Hock, P.-A. Mumm, and N. Oettinger, 357-361,
Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft.
[142] A figure of poetic grammar in Indo-European: Synchrony and
diachrony in nuce. Studies in Poetics. Commemorative Volume Krystyna
Pomorska (1928-1986), ed. by E. Semeka Pankretov, 553-558.
Columbus: Slavica Publications.
[143] El proto-indoeuropeo. Las Lenguas Indoeuropeas, ed. by A.
Giacolone Ramat and P. Ramat. [Spanish translation of 135.]

1996
[144] Notes on Early Irish Poetics. A Celtic Florilegium: Studies in Memory of
Brendan Hehir, ed. by K. Klar, E. Sweetser, C. Thomas, 210-215.
Andover, MA: Celtic Studies Publications.

1997
[145] Just day before yesterday. Festschrift for Eric P. Hamp, ed. by D. Q.
Adams, vol. II, 195-198. Journal of Indo-European Studies,
Monograph no. 25. Washington D.C.: Institute for the Study of
Man.
522 In Memoriam

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[146] Luvo-Hittite: lapan(a)-. Studies in Honor of Jaan Puhvel. Part One.
Ancient Languages and Philology, ed. by D. Disterheft, M. Huld, and
J. Greppin, 29-35. Journal of Indo-European Studies, Monograph
no. 20. Washington D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man.
[147] The black and white adunaton. Dn do Oide, Essays in Memory of
Conn R. Clirigh (1927 1995), ed. by A. Ahlquist and V. apkov,
593-597. Dublin: Institiid Teangolaochta ireann.
[148] Proto-Indo-European: comparison and reconstruction. The Indo-
European Languages, ed. by Anna Giacolone and Paolo Ramat, 25-
73. London and New York: Routledge.
[149] The Indo-European Background of Vedic Poetics. Inside the Texts,
Beyond the Texts, ed. by Michael Witzel and Maria Greene, 245-256.
Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
[150] Delbrck and the syntax of Hittite and Luvian: predictive power.
Berthold Delbrck y la sintaxis indoeuropea hoy, ed. by Emilio Crespo
and Jos Luis Garca Ramn, 611-630. Madrid-Wiesbaden:
Ediciones de la UAM - Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag.
[151] Throng-lord of throngs: an Indo-Iranian stylistic figure. Syntaxe des
langues indo-iraniennes anciennes, ed. by Eric Pirart. Aula Orientalis
- Supplementa 6. Barcelona: Editorial Ausa.

1998
[152] Greece in Italy outside Rome. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology
97, 1995 [1998]:35-50.
[153] Homer and Hittite Revisited. Style and Tradition: Studies in Honor
of Wendell Clausen, ed. by P. Knox and C. Foss, 201-216. Stuttgart
and Leipzig: Teubner.
[154] La linguistique compare en 1997: quelques reflections.
International Congress of Linguistics 16, Paper 10. CD-ROM:
Elsevier Science Ltd.

1999
[155] EPITAFIOS LOGOS. Compositiones Indogermanicae in Memoriam
Jochem Schindler, ed. by H. Eichner and H.C. Luschtzky, with the
collaboration of V. Sadovski, ix-xii. Praha: enigma corporation.
[156] Questions of syntax and meter in Tocharian. Compositiones
Indogermanicae in Memoriam Jochem Schindler, ed. by H. Eichner and
H.C. Luschtzky, with the collaboration of V. Sadovski, 601-614.
Praha: enigma corporation
[157] A Celtic Miscellany. Proceedings of the Tenth Annual UCLA Indo-
European Conference, Los Angeles 1998, ed. by K. Jones-Blei et al., 3-
25. Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph Series no. 32.
Washington: Institute for the Study of Man.
[158] Two Celtic Notes. Studia Celtica et Indogermanica. Festschrift fr
Wolfgang Meid, ed. P. Anreiter and E. Jerem, 539-543. Budapest:
Archeolingua.

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Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
2000
[159] The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots. Second
Edition, revised and edited by Calvert Watkins. Pp. xli +149.
Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
[160] s fig in Indo-Iranian and Anatolian. Anusantatyai. Festschrift fr
Johanna Narten zum 70. Geburtstag, ed. by A. Hintze and E. Tichy,
263-281. Muenchener Studien zur Sprachwissenschaft Beiheft 19.
Dettelbach: J.H. Rll.
[161] Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans. Revised version in The
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth
Edition, 2007-2015. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin
Company. [See 106].
[162] Appendix I: Indo-European Roots, newly expanded and revised
version in AHD4, 2020-2055. [see 132, 133].

2001
[163] How to Kill a Dragon. Aspects of Indo-European Poetics. New York and
Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Paperback edition of 140].
[164] An Indo-European Linguistic Area and its Characteristics: Ancient
Anatolia. Areal Diffusion as a Challenge to the Comparative
Method? ch. 3, pp. 44-63 of Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance.
Problems in Comparative Linguistics, ed. by A.Y. Eikhenvald and
R.M.W. Dixon. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
[165] A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar: the Origin of the Aegis again.
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100, 2000 [2001]:1-14.
[166] LAnatolie et la Grce: Rsonances culturelles, linguistiques et
potiques. Comptes Rendus de lAcadmie des Inscriptiones et Belles-
Lettres 2000 [2001]:1143-1158. Paris: Boccard.
[167] A la suite des perspectives traces par Michel Lejeune: aspects du
grec et du celtique. Comptes Rendus de lAcadmie des Inscriptiones et
Belles-Lettres 2001, 213-223. Paris: Boccard.

2002
[168] Homer and Hittite Revisited II. Recent Developments in Hittite
Archeology and History. Papers in Memory of Hans G. Gterbock, ed. by
K.A. Yener and H.A. Hoffner Jr., with the assistance of S. Dhesi,
167-176. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns.
[169] Pindars Rig Veda. Journal of the American Oriental Society 122
(Festschrift Stanley Insler, ed. by J. P. Brereton and S.W.
Jamison):432-435.
[170] EPEVN YESIS. Poetic Grammar, Word Order and Metrical
Structure in the Odes of Pindar. Indogermanische Syntax: Fragen und
Perspektiven, ed. by H. Hettrich, 217-235. Wiesbaden: Reichert.
[171] Some Indo-European Logs. Anatolia Antica. Studi in Memoria di
Fiorella Imparati, ed. by S. de Martio and F. Pecchioli Daddi, II 879-
884. Firenze: LoGisma.

2003
[172] Hittite ku-ku-us-zi, KUB 10.99 i 29. Hittite Studies in Honor of Harry
A. Hoffner Jr. on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday, ed. by G.
524 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
Beckman, R. Beal and G. McMahon, 389-391. Winona Lake,
Indiana: Eisenbrauns.
[173] Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, Second edition.
Revised version of 129.
[174] OIEL, second edition. Revised version of 130.
[175] OIEL, second edition. Revised version of 131.

2004
[176] Hittite. ch. 18 of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Worlds Ancient
Languages, ed. by R. Woodard, 551-575. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
[177] The Third Donkey: Origin Legends and Some Hidden Indo-
European Themes, ch. 5 of Indo-European Perspectives. Studies in
Honour of Anna Morpurgo Davies, ed. by J.H.W. Penney, 65-80.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.

2005
[178] The Old Irish Word for Fleshfork. Heroic Poets and Poetic Heroes in
Celtic Tradition. A Festschrift for Patrick K. Ford, ed. by J.F. Nagy,
377-378. CSANA Yearbook 3-4. Dublin: Four Courts Press.
[179] Il proto-indoeuropeo. ch. 2 of Enrico Campanile, Bernard Comrie
and Calvert Watkins, Introduzione alla lingua e alla cultura degli
Indoeuropei, 39-97. Bologna: Il Mulino. [Reissue of 135.]

2006
[180] The Erbessos Blues, and other tales of the semantics of case and
the semantics of love among the western Greeks. La langue
potique indo-europenne. Actes du Colloque de travail de la
Indogermanische Gesellschaft, 22-24 octobre 2003, ed. by G.-J. Pinault
and D. Petit, 517-521. Collection Linguistique publie par la
Socit de Linguistique de Paris 91. Leuven - Paris: Peeters.
[181] Two Tokens of Indo-Iranian Hieratic Language. Indogermanica.
Festschrift fr Gert Klingenschmitt, ed. G. Schweiger, 681-687.
Tarimering 2005 [2006]: Schweiger VWT-Verlag.

2007
[182] Hipponactea quaedam. Hesperos. Studies in Ancient Greek Poetry
Presented to M. L. West on his Seventieth Birthday, ed. P. Finglass et
al., 118-125. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
[183] Mycenean e-u-te-re-u TH Ft 140.2 and the suffixless locative. Verba
Docenti. Studies in Historical and Indo-European Linguistics presented
to Jay H. Jasanoff, ed. by A.J. Nussbaum, 359-63. Ann Arbor/New
York: Beechstave Press.
[184] The Golden Bowl. Thoughts on the new Sappho and its Asianic
background. Classical Antiquity 26:2 (2007), 305-325.

2008
[185] What makes the study of Irish worthwhile? Why Irish? Irish
Language and Literature in Academia, ed. Brian Conchubhair, 43-
54. Galway: Arlen House.
Calvert Watkins 525

Volume 41, Number 3 & 4, Fall/Winter 2013
[186] Hermit Crabs, or New Wine in Old Bottles: Anatolian-Hellenic
Connections from Homer and Before to Antiochus I of
Commagene and After. Anatolian Interfaces. Hittites, Greeks and
their Neighbors. Proceedings of an International Conference on Cross-
Cultural Interaction, September 1719, Emory University, Atlanta, GA,
ed. by Billie Jean Collins, Mary R. Bachvarova, and Ian C.
Rutherford, 135141. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
[187] Selected Writings. vol. III: Publications 19922008. ed. by Lisi Oliver.
Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft, Band
129. Pp. xiv + 328.

2009
[188] The Milk of the Dawn Cows Revisited. East and West. Papers in
Indo-European Studies, ed. by Kazuhiko Yoshida and Brent Vine,
225239. Bremen: Hempen Verlag.

2010
[189] An Indo-European Stylistic Figure in Hittite: The a a b Triad and
the Climactic Formula V
1
V
1
V
j
. Investigationes Anatolicae.
Gedenkschrift fr Erich Neu, ed. by Jrg Klinger, Elisabeth Rieken,
and Christel Rster, 329335. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
[190] Notes on the Hittite Funerary Ritual for a Prince or a Princess.
Ipamati kistamati pari tumatimis : Luwian and Hittite Studies
Presented to J. David Hawkins on the Occasion of his 70th Birthday, ed.
by Itamar Singer, 244248. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University Institute
of Archaeology.

2011
[191] The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots. Third
Edition, revised and edited by Calvert Watkins. Pp. xxxiv + 151.
Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

2012
[192] Un nom thophore indo-europen? POLUMNTIS. Mlanges en
lhonneur de Franoise Bader, ed. by Alain Blanc et al., 149153.
Leuven: Peeters.

2013
[193] Aspects of the Expressive Dimension in Indo-European: Toward
a Comparative Grammar of Speech Registers. Proceedings of the
24th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference, ed. by Stephanie W.
Jamison, H. Craig Melchert, and Brent Vine, XXXXXX.
Bremen: Hempen Verlag.

2014
[194] Notes on Hittite, Greek and Indo-European Poetics. To appear in a
forthcoming festschrift.

526 In Memoriam

The Journal of Indo-European Studies
The editors are indebted to Lisi Oliver for her invaluable
assistance in compiling this bibliography, including her
providing digitized versions of the lists published in Selected
Writings I-II and Selected Writings III (Innsbruck:
Innsbrucker Beitrge zur Sprachwissenschaft 80 and 129,
1994 and 2008).

H. Craig Melchert
University of California, Los Angeles

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