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Linguistics

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Achaemenid Royal Inscriptions Project
The aim of the Achaemenid Royal Inscriptions project is to create an electronic study edition of the inscriptions of the Achaemenid Persian kings from Persepolis, where the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago carried out excavations between 1931 and 1939, presenting the texts in all of their versions--Old Persian, Elamite, Akkadian, and, where appropriate, Aramaic and Egyptian--and showing the inscriptions in their architectural contexts.

AEgyptian-L
Ancient Egyptian Language List Archive.

The Afroasiatic Index Project
The Afroasiatic Index Project is a scholarly initiative that aims at creating an etymological database of Afroasiatic languages.

The Akkadian Language
Home page (DUB.E = tuppi bitim, `home clay tablet') on Akkadian, an introduction collected by John Heise. Akkadian is a great cultural language of world history. These pages are about the cuneiform writing system on clay tablets, the language, the grammar. Some texts examples with transliteration and explanation are presented.

Ancient Scripts
Examples of writing systems from around the world, including Mesoamerica, Europe, and Middle East.

CELTLING - Discussion List
Celtic linguistics. Send request to celtling@mitvma.mit.edu.

Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition (CARLA)
Akkadian, Aramaic, Hebrew, Hebrew - Biblical, Hebrew - Classical ,Hittite ,Middle Iranian ,Middle Persian ,Old Persian,
Phoenician ,Sumerian ,Syriac, Ugaritic.

Center for Computer Analysis of Texts (CCAT)

The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary Project
The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary, initiated in 1921 by James Henry Breasted, is compiling a comprehensive dictionary of the various dialects of Akkadian, the earliest known Semitic language that was recorded on cuneiform texts that date from c. 2400 B.C. to A.D. 100 which were recovered from archaeological excavations of ancient Near Eastern sites.

The Chicago Hittite Dictionary Project
The Chicago Hittite Dictionary Project (CHD) was officially started in 1975 with the awarding of an NEH grant to Harry A. Hoffner and Hans G. Güterbock, the editors. It was conceived in answer to a recognized need for a Hittite-English lexical tool, a concordance for lexicographical research for all parts of the corpus of Hittite texts.

Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature

Ethnologue
The Ethnologue is a catalogue of more than 6,700 languages spoken in 228 countries. The Ethnologue Name Index lists over 39,000 language names, dialect names, and alternate names. The Ethnologue Language Family Index organizes languages according to language families.

Explore! Linguistics
The Explore! Linguistics site is devoted to introducing high school students and anyone interested to the study of language and linguistics.

GERLINGL
Older Germanic languages (to 1500). Send request to gerlingl@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu.

Human Languages Page
The Human-Languages Page is a comprehensive catalog of language-related Internet resources. The over 1700 links in the HLP database have been hand-reviewed to bring you the best language links the Web has to offer. Whether you're looking for online language lessons, translating dictionaries, native literature, translation services, software, language schools, or just a little information on a language you've heard about, the HLP probably has something to suit your needs.

LATAMLIN
Latin American linguistics.Send request to latamlin@mitvma.mit.edu.

LINGUIST
Linguistics Send message "subscribe linguist your-first-name your-last-name" to listserv@tamvm1.tamu.edu.

Sumerian Language Page

The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project
The goal of the RIM project is to make the inscriptions of the rulers of ancient Mesopotamia available to layman and specialist alike by publishing standard editions of all the texts. Mesopotamia was home to one of the two first great civilizations of the world. The civilization created by the Assyrians, Babylonians, Sumerians, and Akkadians around the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flourished for over two and a half millennia (ca. 3000-500 BC). The inscriptions of its rulers recorded their many achievements, were written in the cuneiform script and were composed primarily in the Akkadian and Sumerian languages.

State Archives of Assyria

The Sumerian Text Archive
The Sumerian Text Archive offers a growing collection of transliterated Sumerian texts. These texts have been transliterated using only characters from the ASCII alphabet so that the text files can be used on every type of computer. As a result, however, the transliterations deviate in a number of ways from what is common practice in Sumerology.


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   Last Updated: April 7, 1998. archonnet@hotmail.com.