Contents PreJace by G. Gno1i, Y.M. Gusalov and A.Y. Rosssi CmlCOK TpY,lfOB B.H. AoaeBa
(Works by V.I. Abaev)
H.W. Bailey, ZoIaq and colaq
5 9 27
,ll)l(. 50HepaHTe, Ell.(e pa3 o rrpapO,lfHHe HH,lfOeBporretiueB (Once
Again on the Homeland oJ Proto-Indo-Europeans) A. ChristoI, De la parole à la prière (Oss. kuvyn)............................ M.A. ,llaHLlaMaes, CaTparr BaBHJlOHHH ryoapy (Cubaru, Satrap oJ Babylonia)............................................ ....................................
3I 35
45
IO.A. ,ll3HUUOHTbI, K cKHepo-eBporreticKHM apeaJlbHbIM H30r JlOCCaM
(On Scytho-European Areallsoglottic Lines)
55
,ll.H. 3L1eJlbMaH, K rrpOHCXO)f{,lfeHHIO HpaHcKo-eBporreikKHx
(On the Cenesis oJ lrano-European Crammaticallsoglottic Lines) R.N. Frye, Ossete-Central Asian Connections IO.C. rarJlOHTH, O rrpOHCXO)f{,lfeHHH epaMHJlbHOrO HMeHH AJIaraTa (On the Origin oJ A1agata Famify Name) L Gershevitch, Baluchi Audition and the Kurdish Rhinocrasis L Gershevitch, Fossilized Imperatival Morphemes in Ossetic G. Gnoli, Two Historical Questions Relating to the Alans and the Mountains rpaMMaTHtlecKHx H30rJlOCC
63 79 85 105 141 161
A.H. HSaH'-IHK, CKHepCKHti epOJlbKJIOp H aHTHtIHafl JlHTepaTypa (K HCTOtIHHKaM Herod. I, 103-104; IV, 11-12) (Scythian Folklore and Antique Literature (On the Sources: Herod. I, 103-104; IV, 11-12))
169
A.A. KepHMosa, O HeKOTopblX ocooeHHocTflX pa3BHTHfl coBpeMeHHoro Ta,lf)f{HKCKOro JIHTepa TypHoro fl3blKa (On Some Peculiarities oJ the Development oJ the Modern Tajik Literary Language) ..
197
r.A. KJlHMOS, KapTBeJIbCKHe aHaJlOrHH HH,lfOeBporreticKoro
*tep- 'ObITb ropfltIHM, TerrJIbIM' (Kartvelian Analogies oJ IndoEuropean *tep- 'to be hot, warm ')
207 7