List of tables
Table 1.The Proto-Germanic obstruent system
Table 2.The Gothic obstruent system
Table 3.Two binary categorizations of voiceless aspirated [Þh], voiceless unaspirated [Þ], and voiced unaspirated [Ð] fricatives
according to speech style
Table 4.Feature composition of aspirated consonants (Ch), unaspirated consonants (C), aspirated fricatives (Þ), and unaspirated
fricatives (Ð)
Table 5.Distribution of fricative suffixes in lexemes in terms of type frequency according to their conformity/exceptionality to TL
Table 6.Laryngeal cooccurrence patterns of CVC
Table 7.Distribution of /þl-/ and /fl-/ in Biblical Gothic in terms of token frequency
Table 8.Specification of fricatives according to the feature [strident] or its close approximate, the feature [sibilant]
Table 9.List of biconsonantal clusters (fricative + C) in Proto-Germanic
Table 10.Possible realizations of PGmc. */fn-/ in Gothic 1
Table 11.Possible realizations of PGmc. */fn-/ in Gothic 2
Table 12.Possible realizations of PGmc. */fn-/ in Gothic 3
Table 13.The Koine Greek obstruent system
Table 14.The Koine Greek obstruent system (elaborated)
Table 15.The Proto-Gothic obstruent system
Table 16.The Biblical Gothic obstruent system
Table 17.The Koine Greek obstruent system
Table 18.The west-versus-east organization of the distribution of some amphora types in the fourth century Lower Danube/Black Sea regions
(actual)
Table 19.The north-versus-south organization of an alternative distribution of some amphora types in the fourth century Lower Danube/Black Sea
regions (hypothetical)
Table 20.Main attributes of the set of five fricative changes in Gothic initiated by fricative aspiration