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. We also welcome contributions on other aspects of Egyptology and neighbouring disciplines, in so far as they relate to the journal's scope. Contributors are entitled to twenty offprints. Short articles on grammar and lexicon (max. four pages) will be published in the section 'Miscellanies'.
LingAeg 1 (1991) – Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Egyptian Grammar (Crossroads II) Los Angeles, October 17–20, 1990 LingAeg 2 (1992) LingAeg 3 (1993) LingAeg 4 (1994) – Proceedings of the International Conference on Egyptian Grammar (Crossroads III) Yale, April 4-9, 1994 LingAeg 5 (1997) LingAeg 6 (1999) LingAeg 7 (2000) LingAeg 8 (2000) – Reading the Eloquent Peasant: Proceedings of the International Conference on The Tale of the Eloquent Peasant at the University of California, Los Angeles, March 27-30, 1997 LingAeg 9 (2001) – Structuring Egyptian Syntax. A Tribute to Sarah Israelit-Groll LingAeg 10 (2002) LingAeg 11 (2003) LingAeg 12 (2004) LingAeg 13 (2005) LingAeg 14 (2006) – “After Polotsky”. New Research and Trends in Egyptian and Coptic Linguistics out of print
(pdf in preparation)LingAeg 15 (2007) LingAeg 16 (2008) LingAeg 17 (2009) – Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Egyptian Grammar (Crossroads IV) Basel, March 19–22, 2009 LingAeg 18 (2010)
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
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