Results 151 to 160 of about 1,666 (204)

Materials for the Historical Phonology of the Mongol Language

open access: yesMaterials for the Historical Phonology of the Mongol Language
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Horse Gait Terms in Turkic Languages of Siberia (Compared to Mongolic Languages)

Vestnik NSU. Series: History and Philology, 2023
Purpose. Russian and foreign linguists studied the influence of Turkic languages on the grammatical and lexical composition of Mongolic languages. Material from monuments and modern living languages of Siberia shed light on the role of the early Turkic and Mongolic language in the development of the modern linguistic landscape of the region, specifying
F. N. Diachkovskiy   +4 more
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Horse Tack Terms in the Mongolic Languages

International Journal of Eurasian Linguistics, 2023
Abstract The Mongolic languages have a rich terminology related to horse tack. The tack includes the bridle, horse’s bit, halter, lead rope, reins, saddle, horse blanket, stirrup, various straps and girths. They all have special names in Mongolic. The aim of this paper is to collect these specific terms from the Mongolic languages and discuss them from
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Language Development in Mongols

British Journal of Special Education, 1974
Dr. David Evans, senior lecturer in education, Exeter University, describes his recent research which indicates the importance of sex, age and other differences in the language development of mongol children and ...
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Horse Harness Naming in Yakut (as compared to Mongolic languages)

NSU Vestnik. Series: Linguistics and Intercultural Communication, 2023
   The paper analyzes and describes the lexico-semantic groups (further, LSG) “Horse harness” in Yakut in comparison to Khalkha-Mongolian, Buryat, and Kalmyk.   The purpose of the study is to introduce horse harness naming in academic use in the comparative and comparative-historical aspects.
F. N. Diachkovskiy   +2 more
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The classification of the Mongolic languages

2020
The Mongolic languages constitute a compact language family with limited written history. Given the paucity of decisive shared features such as sound laws, it has been relatively hard to set up a Mongolic family tree. Owing to the steady increase in the number of sufficiently studied Mongolic languages and dialects in the past 60 years, Mongolists have
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Oirat and Kalmyk, the Western Mongolic languages

2020
Oirat and Kalmyk constitute the western branch of Mongolic languages. “Oirat” is a general signifier of dialects having common features, whose speakers live scattered in a vast territory of North Eurasia (Mongolia, China, Russia, and Kyrgyzstan). Kalmyk originates from Oirat, but became a separate language in a Turkic and Russian environment in Eastern
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The Mongolic Languages

2006
Once the rulers of the largest land empire that has ever existed on earth, the historical Mongols of Chinggis Khan left a linguistic heritage which today survives in the form of more than a dozen different languages, collectively termed Mongolic. For general linguistic theory, the Mongolic languages offer interesting insights to problems of areal ...
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The Altaic languages

2020
This chapter presents a general overview of the three language groupings, i.e. Tungusic, Mongolic, and Turkic, that are traditionally covered by the term “Altaic”. Each language family is briefly discussed in terms of its geographical distribution and classification as well as its current sociolinguistic profile, i.e.
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