1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911046630003321

Titolo

Rays of language : linguistic perspectives on non-literary papyri and related sources

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Helsinki : , : Helsinki University Press, , 2025

ISBN

952-369-140-6

9789523691407

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource

Soggetti

Manuscripts, Greek (Papyri) - Egypt

Greek language - History

Manuscripts, Latin (Papyri) - Egypt

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (pages) and index.

Nota di contenuto

Contributors Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Researching the language of the Greek papyri: Recent progress and the shape of the future PART I LANGUAGE CONTACT AND SCRIBAL INFLUENCE Chapter 3: Iotacism in Egyptian Greek: Greek-internal development and transfer effect from Egyptian-Coptic Chapter 4: Spelling variation of technical terms in the Greek medical papyri Chapter 5: Remarks on Adams’ category ‘regional’ loanwords: Selected examples from Latin documentary papyri Chapter 6: Case inflection in the early Arabic papyri (643–750 CE) PART II QUANTITATIVE STUDIES Chapter 7: Diminutives in the Greek papyri: A corpus-based investigation Chapter 8: Defining the infinite: The articular infinitive in the Greek documentary papyri PART III NEW INSIGHTS ON GREEK SYNTAX Chapter 9: Rewriting the history of the optative in the postclassical Greek papyri and literary texts (III BCE–VI CE): Persistence, formulae, and innovation Chapter 10: Routes to insubordination in classical and postclassical Greek: ὅτι (and ἵνα) in the sentence and discourse grammar Chapter 11: Investigating the disclosure formula in non- literary papyri: Some observations on complement clauses PART IV SOCIO-PRAGMATIC APPROACHES Chapter 12: Communicating in high-register Greek in private papyrus letters of the Roman period of Egypt Chapter 13: Everyday occupations in Roman and Late Antique Egypt: ‘Metadata’ as



data for the study of linguistic variation Chapter 14: A pragmatic and discourse analysis of the particle οὖν/oûn in documentary papyri.

Sommario/riassunto

Renewed attention to the language of ancient documentary sources – above all Greek papyri – has opened new paths in linguistic research. Rays of Language: Linguistic Perspectives on Non-Literary Papyri and Related Sources brings together specialists from across the field to explore how everyday written documents illuminate linguistic diversity, change, and communication in the ancient world. The volume offers a comprehensive overview of current approaches to the study of non-literary Greek and related languages. Drawing on new corpora, digital tools, and theoretical frameworks, the contributors examine a wide range of linguistic phenomena from spelling practices and language contact to syntax, register, and discourse structure. Each chapter demonstrates how documentary texts, often considered peripheral, in fact provide crucial evidence for the dynamics of language in use and for the multilingual realities of Graeco-Roman and Late Antique Egypt.The book is organised into four thematic parts. Part 1: Language Contact and Scribal Influence explores multilingualism, scribal norms, and the interplay between Greek and other languages used in Egypt, including Latin and Coptic, while also considering early Arabic documentary practices within a comparative framework. Part 2: Quantitative Studies applies corpus-based and computational methods to questions of usage and change, revealing new insights into frequency and distribution. Part 3: New Insights on Greek Syntax investigates syntactic developments in the papyri, shedding light on phenomena such as the optative, insubordination, and variation in formulaic complementation structures. And Part 4: Socio-Pragmatic Approaches situates linguistic choices within their social and communicative settings, analysing stylistic variation, occupational language, and discourse markers. By situating Greek within its wider linguistic environment – engaging with Latin, Coptic, and Arabic sources – Rays of Language broadens the horizons of papyrological linguistics and historical sociolinguistics alike. It offers both a synthesis of ongoing developments and a stimulus for future research into the language of the ancient Mediterranean’s everyday written culture.