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Philology versus linguistics and Aramaic phonology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2006

M. J. GELLER
Affiliation:
University College, London

Abstract

The recent publication of The Cambridge Encylopedia of the World's Ancient Languages provides an occasion for assessing the present state of our knowledge of ancient languages. Any assessment, however, will inevitably be influenced by methodology and point of view, depending upon whether the reader is a linguist or a philologist. The present author would broadly define the difference in the following way, at least as far as ancient languages are concerned: linguists tend to focus on the rules of language and general theories about language which can be generated from these rules, while philologists, although concerned with formal grammar, tend to scrutinize the textual evidence upon which a grammar is based. These two approaches are sometimes difficult to reconcile.

Type
Articles
Copyright
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 2006

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