Contents


in: author title


  1. Stachowski M. and Woodhouse R., The etymology of İstanbul: making optimal use of the evidence, SEC 20 (2015), 221–245 [details]
  2. Woodhouse R., Gothic þl- : fl- variation is due to Ablaut, not interdialectal borrowing, SEC 5 (2000), 145–147 [details]
  3. Woodhouse R., Latin totus ‘all’: a semantic parallel, SEC 6 (2001), 193 [details]
  4. Woodhouse R., Hebrew šibbōleṯ ‘ear of grain; (olive) branch’ and ‘stream, torrent, flood’: An etymological appraisal, SEC 7 (2002), 173–189 [details]
  5. Woodhouse R., Supporting evidence for affricate * in Canaanite, SEC 7 (2002), 171–172 [details]
  6. Woodhouse R., Varia Hebraica 1–3, SEC 10 (2005), 211–218 [details]
  7. Woodhouse R., Conditioned devoicing of mediae in Phrygian, SEC 11 (2006), 157–191 [details]
  8. Woodhouse R., New Phrygian ζειρα(ι), ζως, πεις and πειες, SEC 12 (2007), 189–201 [details]
  9. Woodhouse R., Old Phrygian kcianaveyos, SEC 13 (2008), 171–182 [details]
  10. Woodhouse R., Three Germanic etyma requiring PIE *b?, SEC 14 (2009), 307–312 [details]
  11. Woodhouse R., Refining Phrygian diachronic phonology: The case of Phrygian (?) γάλλος ‘priest’, SEC 15 (2010), 137–142 [details]
  12. Woodhouse R., Lubotsky’s and Beekes’ laws, PIE *(H)r-, *(H)i(V)-, *a and some other laryngeal matters, SEC 16 (2011), 151–187 [details]
  13. Woodhouse R., Slavic *edn- ‘one’ and Winter’s law, SEC 17 (2012), 151–178 [details]
  14. Woodhouse R., Me and etymology, SEC 19 (2014), 21–34 [details]
  15. Woodhouse R., Some Greek etymologies, SEC 19 (2014), 189–204 [details]
  16. Woodhouse R., Some observations on the putative dual reflexes of PIE *CRHC in Greek and Armenian. Francis’ law and Greek αὐχήν ‘neck, etc.’, SEC 20 (2015), 257–272 [details]
  17. Woodhouse R., Two properties of PIE *h3, SEC 20 (2015), 273–284 [details]