Pierre-Yves Lambert
Pierre-Yves Lambert, former student of the École Normale Supérieure, is a French professor and linguist. He is a researcher at the CNRS and a lecturer at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in historical and philological sciences.
He specializes in the history and etymology of Celtic languages as well as the study of Celtic literature. In particular, he worked on Old Irish, Old Breton and Old Welsh and on Gaulish inscriptions. He collaborated on the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises.
He is the author of an important book on the Gaulish language.
Published works
- 1981: Les Littératures celtiques, Presses universitaires de France, series Que sais-je?, Paris
- 1983: Le Lexique Étymologique de l'Irlandais Ancien de J. Vendryes, in: Bachellery, Édouard and Pierre-Yves Lambert, Das etymologische Wörterbuch : Fragen der Konzeption und Gestaltung, pp. 17–24, Alfred Bammesberger, ed. Regensberg : Friedrich Pustet
- 1985: Les gloses bibliques de Jean Scot : l'élément vieil-irlandais, Études celtiques, XXII, p. 205-224.
- 1986: Les gloses celtiques aux commentaires de Virgile, Études celtiques, XXIII, p. 81-128.
- 1987: Les gloses grammaticales brittoniques, Études celtiques, XXIV, p. 285-308.
- 1994: La langue gauloise: description linguistique, commentaire d'inscriptions choisies, Errance, Paris, (Collection des Hesperides).
- 1993: Anonymous, Les Quatre branches du Mabinogi, translated from medium Welsh, presented and annotated by Pierre-Yves Lambert, Éditions Gallimard, series "L’aube des peuples", Paris, ISBN 2-07-073201-0.
- 1996: Anthologie de la poésie irlandaise du XXe siècle, under the direction of Jean-Yves Masson, Gaelic authors chosen and presented by Pierre-Yves Lambert, bilingual edition
- 1997: L’impersonnel en celtique, in Scribthair a ainm n-ogaim, Scritti in memoria di Enrico Campanile, Pise, II, p. 491-514.
- 1996: Lexique étymologique de l'irlandais ancien (initiated by Joseph Vendryes), fasc. B-1980, C-1987
gollark: * yeße
gollark: > imagine utilizing the stack instead of dynamically allocating your own stack.If you do recursive calls, you are utilizing staqa.
gollark: There are some nice Rust bindings for Janet.
gollark: Thus recursion without stack overflows.
gollark: COOL languages optimize these instead of actually calling it normally and making the stack bigger.
See also
- Celts
- Celtic languages
- Bibliography on Celtic civilization
- Leyden Manuscript
External links
- Pierre-Yves Lambert page on École pratique des hautes études
- LAMBERT Pierre-Yves on AOROC
- La langue gauloise, Description linguistique, commentaire d'inscriptions choisies on Persée
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