Results 121 to 130 of about 413 (152)
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Anatolian Languages and Indo-European Migrations to Greece
Classical World, 1997Margalit Finkelberg
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Pronominal Morphology in the Anatolian Language Family
Altorientalische Forschungen, 2012exaly +2 more sources
6. The development of the PIE phonological system in the anatolian daughter languages
Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 1984exaly +2 more sources
Adapted Design Language for Anatolian Vernacular Housing
Open House International, 2016This paper aims to define an adapted contemporary design language for housing built next to vernacular residential buildings of Anatolian villages. The case has been selected from Balıkesir province in the North-western part of Anatolia within a corpus of 104 houses from selected 81 villages of the region.
Ömer Erem, Selen Abbasoğlu Ermiyagil
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Is Armenian an Anatolian Language?
Language, 1942[Armenian, like Hittite, Luwian, and Lycian, retains the third laryngeal initially, and has no inherited long vowels, no palatal-velar distinction, and no feminine gender. These and other archaisms lead to the conclusion that Armenian is an Anatolian language and can be compared to more advantage with Lycian and Hittite than with the IE languages ...
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5. The development of the PIE phonological system in the non-anatolian daughter languages
Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 1984exaly +2 more sources
2015
The family of Anatolian languages, a subgroup of the large Indo-European language family, includes Hittite, Palaic, Luwic (including Luwian, Lycian, Carian, Sidetic, Pisidian, Kalašmian), and Lydian, spoken in Anatolia (Turkey) and North Syria. The transmission spans the time from the 3rd millenium bce until the Roman period.
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The family of Anatolian languages, a subgroup of the large Indo-European language family, includes Hittite, Palaic, Luwic (including Luwian, Lycian, Carian, Sidetic, Pisidian, Kalašmian), and Lydian, spoken in Anatolia (Turkey) and North Syria. The transmission spans the time from the 3rd millenium bce until the Roman period.
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Greek-Anatolian Language Contact and the Settlement of Pamphylia
Classical Antiquity, 2017The Ancient Greek dialect of Pamphylia shows extensive influence from the nearby Anatolian languages. Evidence from the linguistics of Greek and Anatolian, sociolinguistics, and the historical and archaeological record suggest that this influence is due to Anatolian speakers learning Greek as a second language as adults in such large numbers that ...
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