Results 31 to 40 of about 16,858 (266)
KHABTAGAEVA, B. Language Contact in Siberia: Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic Loanwords in Yeniseian, Brill, Leiden-Boston, 2019.
P. Piispanen
semanticscholar +1 more source
Wind-Related Terms in Mongolic Languages: Etymology and Semantics
Introduction. The article examines etymologies and semantics of wind-related terms in the Mongolic languages. Goals. The study primarily seeks to identify some etymological and semantic–typological features inherent to the specified thematic group of the
Anna V. Dybo +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Ceremonial Folklore of Mongolic Peoples: Functions of the Snake Revisited
Introduction. In mythologies of the world, the image of the snake ranks among the most studied characters and has various interpretations. In folklore of Turko-Mongols, it has also been a subject of multiple analyses.
Liudmila S. Dampilova +1 more
doaj +1 more source
Triangulation supports agricultural spread of the Transeurasian languages
The origin and early dispersal of speakers of Transeurasian languages—that is, Japanese, Korean, Tungusic, Mongolic and Turkic—is among the most disputed issues of Eurasian population history1–3.
Martine Robbeets +40 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Noyon Galdama in Written and Oral Traditions of Mongolic Peoples
Introduction. Oirat old-script texts tell us about the prominent historical figure of Noyon Galdma (Kalm., Oir. Һалдма, Һалдмба; Mong. Галдамаа, Галдамбаа), son of Khan Ochirtu-Tsetsen, grandson of Khan Baibagas of the Khoshuts and Khong Tayiji Erdeni ...
Elza P. Bakaeva
doaj +1 more source
Conditions on Iterative Rounding Harmony in Oroqen [PDF]
In this paper, we re-examine the claim that Baiyinna Oroqen, a language of the Tungusic family with a largely predictable distribution of non-high round vowels, requires a non-iterative type of rounding harmony, by demonstrating instead the need for a ...
Dresher, BE, Nevins, A
core +1 more source
On the Proto-Turkic */d₂/ and Mongolic *uda- ‘to be late’
The present study focuses on the Proto-Turkic phoneme */d₂/ in intervocalic position, which can be reconstructed only through external data from Mongolic and other Altaic languages. For this phoneme, four examples are presented. These are *kad₂a ‘rock’,
Orçun Ünal
doaj
Creation and revitalization of the Estonian National Register of anthropometric data [PDF]
Anthropmetric data have always been of interest for scientists. They have also great practical value for different groups of people: tailors, designers and also health care specialists.
Tiit, Ene-Margit
core +2 more sources
With a charge‐ion coupling engineering strategy, a K+/vacancy disordered K0.5Mn0.8Co0.1Ti0.1O2 material has been designed. The targeted transition metal doping disrupts charge ordering and inducing K+/vacancy disordering, thereby enabling rapid K+ diffusion through interconnected channels and a stable solid‐solution reaction mechanism.
Yongfeng Jia +10 more
wiley +1 more source
The present study questions whether the Old Turkic verb us- ‘to be thirsty’ is derived from the nominal base *u ‘water’, which is attested as such in Kitan and as *usun in Common Mongolic. Since there
Orçun Ünal
doaj +1 more source

