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Indo-Europeans

2012
This article presents an overview of the arrival and florescence of the Indo-European languages in Anatolia, the most famous of which is Hittite. The weight of current linguistic evidence supports the traditional view that Indo-European speakers are intrusive to Asia Minor, coming from somewhere in eastern Europe.
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Indo-European Flora

1997
Abstract As with animals, there is also an extensive reconstructed vocabulary relating to the various forms of plant life in Proto-Indo-European. The general name for ‘tree’, *do´ru, is attested in eleven different groups, either under its root form (e.g. OIr daur ‘oak’, Grk do´ru ‘tree trunk; wood; spear’. Hit ta¯ru ‘tree,
J P Mallory, D Q Adams
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Indo-European Fauna

1997
Abstract Many attempts to fix the location of the Proto-Indo-European world have depended heavily on the reconstructed vocabulary that pertains to the environment, both floral and faunal. It is often reasoned that if the reconstructed environment is specific enough, it can either indicate where the Proto- Indo-Europeans once dwelled or ...
J P Mallory, D Q Adams
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Indo-European and Indo-Europeans

The Modern Language Journal, 1973
Jay H. Jasanoff   +3 more
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Indo-European “bear”

Historical Linguistics, 2017
In the present study designations of 'bear' are collected in all Indo-European branches, where they are known, to analyze them from the point of view of their internal phonological and morphological structure, semantic motivation, and etymology. The terms with more or less transparent semantic motivation can help with interpretation of less transparent
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INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES

2016
Immediately flanking Georgian on the north is Ossetic, the language of the North Ossete Autonomous Republic (capital Dzaujikau, formerly Vladikavkaz) and of the South Ossete Autonomous Province (capital Stalinir, formerly Tskhinval) in Georgia, which bestride the central Caucasus range, and flanking it on the south is Armenian, which is now largely ...
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Indo-European Linguistics

2007
The Indo-European language family consists of many of the modern and ancient languages of Europe, India and Central Asia, including Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, Russian, German, French, Spanish and English. Spoken by an estimated three billion people, it has the largest number of native speakers in the world today.
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Indo-European and Indo-Europeans

2015
A. Sherratt, S. Sherratt
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Indo-European Religions

2016
Indo-European religions does not mean the religion of the Indo-Europeans. The notion of Indo-European is essentially based on linguistic evidence, that is, the systematic homologies that exist between several ancient languages, for example, Greek, Latin, Avestan, Sanskrit, Old Norse, Old Irish, Hittite, so that we can conclude that these languages ...
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