Bible Encyclopedias
Carl Darling Buck

1911 Encyclopedia Britannica

CARL DARLING BUCK (1866-), American philologist, was born on the 2nd of October 1866, at Bucksport, Maine. He graduated at Yale in 1866, was a graduate student there for three years, and studied at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens (1887-1889) and in Leipzig (1889-1892). In 1892 he became professor of Sanskrit and Indo-European comparative philology in the University of Chicago; but it is in the narrower field of the Italic dialects that his important work lies, including Der Vocalismus der oskischen Sprache (1892), The Oscan-Umbrian Verb-System (1895), and Grammar of Oscan and Umbrian (1904), as well as an excellent precis of the Italic languages in Johnson's Universal Cyclopaedia. He collaborated with W. G. Hale in the preparation of A Latin Grammar (1903). Of his contributions to reviews on phonological topics, perhaps the most important is his discussion of "Brugmann's Law."

Bibliography Information
Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Carl Darling Buck'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​c/carl-darling-buck.html. 1910.