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Hypotheses of interference between Greek and the languages of Ancient Anatolia: the case of patronymics

Journal of Language Relationship, 2021
Following an overview of how the different languages attested in Anatolia during the Iron Age express patronymics, this paper explores the alleged interferences among the strategies found in these languages.
Bartomeu Obrador-cursach
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Did Indo-European Languages Stem From a Trans-Eurasian Original Language

Academia Letters, 2021
This interdisciplinary study allowed me to establish, on the basis of linguistic, genetic, archaeological, historical and religious data, that linguistic concordances between Gaulish and Slavic were linked with Neolithic migrations from North-Western ...
Xavier Rouard
semanticscholar   +1 more source

LANGUAGES OF AFFINITY

Kindred Voices, 2021
There is a widespread assumption that Rumi’s son, Sultan Valad, faced an unbearable agony at the thought of succeeding his father. Whereas Rumi is seen as generative and productive, Sultan Valad’s poetry is viewed as less vital and reductive.
Michael Pifer
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Adapted Design Language for Anatolian Vernacular Housing

Open House International, 2016
This 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
openaire   +1 more source

Is Armenian an Anatolian Language?

Language, 1942
Armenian, owing to the large proportion of loan words (chiefly Iranian) in its vocabulary and to certain obscurities in the historical development of its phonology, has never held an important position in Indo-European comparative grammar. In the last century it was elevated from the status of a Persian dialect and was conventionally classed with the ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Anatolian reflexes of Indo-European τομή-, φυγή-, τόμος-, and τομός-type nominals and their historical implications

Indogermanische Forschungen
It is widely thought that Proto-Indo-European τόμος-type nouns are robustly continued in the Anatolian languages. I challenge this view, arguing that most of the alleged Anatolian reflexes of this class instead continue τομή- or φυγή-type nouns, or in a ...
A. Yates
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Spatial Generation in Indo-European Languages and Culture

Ideas and Ideals
The article examines the connections between space, language and cognition in the Indo-European linguistic and cultural sphere. The relevance of the research topic is due to the growing recognition of the interdisciplinary nature of humanitarian research
Maxim Shchegolev
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Anatolian languages

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.
openaire   +1 more source

La riflessività nelle lingue anatoliche

Studia Asiana
The present work aims at an analysis of the category of reflexivity in Anatolian languages, taking Hittite Reflexivpartikel =z(a) as a starting point and analysing its uses in the earliest period.
Marco Ammazzini
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Zu urindogermanisch sū- und einem Toponym in Lykien

Journal of Philia
The Proto-Indo-Europeans knew the wild and probably also the domesticated pig. The PIE word *sū- for this animal is widely attested, but not in the Anatolian languages.
D. Schürr
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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