Hermann Osthoff

Hermann Osthoff (18 April 1847, Billmerich 7 May 1909, Heidelberg) was a German linguist. He was involved in Indo-European studies and the Neogrammarian school. He is known for formulating Osthoff's law, and published widely on Indo-European word-formation and morphology.

Hermann Osthoff

Life

Osthoff studied classical philology, Germanics, Sanskrit and comparative linguistics in Berlin, Tübingen and Bonn. In 1869 he obtained his doctorate in Bonn as a student of Hermann Usener. During his time in that city he became a member of the Burschenschaft Alemannia of Bonn. From 1871 onward, he taught classes at the gymnasium in Kassel. In 1875, he successfully completed his postdoctoral habilitation at the University of Leipzig, and in 1877, was named an associate professor of comparative linguistics and Sanskrit at the University of Heidelberg. Shortly afterwards, he was granted full professorship at Heidelberg, where he later served as dean (1894/95) and vice-rector (1899–1900).[1]

The main focus of his research was in Indo-European languages. Along with Karl Brugmann and August Leskien, he was a significant figure in the founding of the Neogrammarians.[1] He was a vocal critic of a young Ferdinand de Saussure's pioneering work Mémoire sur le système primitif des voyelles dans les langues indo-européennes, in which the 20-year-old Saussure postulated the laryngeal theory in 1879. However, Saussure's theory was confirmed with the discovery of Hittite in the early 20th century.[2]

Selected works

  • Morphologische Untersuchungen auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen (with Karl Brugmann); (6 volumes, 1878–1910) Morphological studies in the field of Indo-European languages.[3]
  • Das Verbum in der Nominalcomposition im Deutschen, Griechischen, Slavischen und Romanischen, 1878 The verb in nominal composition in German, Greek, Slavic and Romance.
  • Das physiologische und psychologische Moment in der sprachlichen Formenbildung, 1879 The physiological and psychological moment in linguistic morphogenesis.
  • Zur Geschichte des Perfects im Indogermanischen, 1884 History of perfects in Indo-European.[4]
gollark: Watch.
gollark: !tr 10
gollark: LyricLy actually uses unicode homoglyph abuse for esobot typerace.
gollark: Or, well, that some specific forms did that.
gollark: I did in fact know of the existence of normalization, just not that it did that.

References

  1. Osthoff, Hermann In: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). Band 19, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-428-00200-8, S. 627 f.
  2. David Ingram (11 September 2014). Critical Theory to Structuralism: Philosophy, Politics and the Human Sciences. Routledge. pp. 224–. ISBN 978-1-317-54687-0.
  3. Morphologische Untersuchungen auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen Sprachen HathiTrust Digital Library
  4. Most widely held works by Hermann Osthoff WorldCat Identities
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.