Beschreibung
Lingua Aegyptia (recommended abbreviation: LingAeg) publishes articles and book reviews on all aspects of Egyptian and Coptic language and literature in the narrower sense:
(a) grammar, including graphemics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, lexicography;
(b) Egyptian language history, including norms, diachrony, dialectology, typology;
(c) comparative linguistics, including Afroasiatic contacts, loanwords;
(d) theory and history of Egyptian literature and literary discourse;
(e) history of Egyptological linguistics.
Inhalt
ARTICLES
M. Victoria Almansa-Villatoro
Nepotism and Social Solidarity in Old Kingdom Correspondence: A Case Study on Facework and Discernment Politeness in P. Boulaq 8 (1–25)
Marc Brose
Perfektives und mperfektives Partizip (27–79)
Silvia Kutscher
Multimodale graphische Kommunikation im pharaonischen Ägypten: Entwurf einer Analysemethode (81–116)
Benoît Lurson
Une scène de débardage engageante ? Une interprétation du poème d’amour pChester Beatty I, recto 17,4–17,6 (117–135)
Aurore Motte
À propos de quelques tournures interrogatives et constructions associées dans les légendes discursives (‘Reden und Rufe’) des tombes privées (137–189)
Carsten Peust
Die Urheimat des Sahidischen (191–232)
Serge Rosmorduc
Automated Transliteration of Late Egyptian Using Neural Networks: An Experiment in “Deep Learning” (233–257)
Sami Uljas
The So-Called Prothetic i- and the sDm-f Paradigms II: The “Nominal” sDm-f and a Reappraisal (259–267)
Sami Uljas
Why Not Say It Straight? On the Pragmatics of Indirect Speech in Coptic (269–284)
REVIEW ARTICLE
Matthias Müller
Kupfer, Klunker und Klamotten: Das Notizbuch des Schreibers Thutmose (285–309)
REVIEWS
Willy Clarysse & Ana I. Blasco Torres (eds), Egyptian Language in Greek Sources: Scripta Onomastica of Jan Quaegebeur (Sonja Dahlgren) (311–316)
Nadine Gräßler, Konzepte des Auges im alten Ägypten (Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert) (317–323)
Marc Brose, Perfekt, Pseudopartizip, Stativ. Die afroasiatische Suffixkonjugation in sprachvergleichender Perspektive (Elsa Oréal) (325–332)
James P. Allen, Ancient Egyptian Phonology (Carsten Peust) (333–353)