Results 21 to 30 of about 341 (241)

Common Lexis for Headgears and Adornments in Khalkha, Buryat, and Kalmyk

open access: yesOriental Studies, 2018
The article deals with the lexis denoting headgears and ornaments in the major Mongolic languages, such as Khalkha, Buryat, and Kalmyk. Due to the fact that no profound research in the field had been carried out, it appeared necessary to have a closer ...
Anna V. Mazarchuk
doaj   +1 more source

Ethnic Minorities of Hulun Buir: Languages and Dialects as an Object of Research

open access: yesМонголоведение, 2020
. Introduction. The article examines languages of some national minorities living in the Hulun Buir Urban District of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region (PRC).
Bazar D. Tsybenov
doaj   +1 more source

On the Proto-Turkic */d₂/ and Mongolic *uda- ‘to be late’

open access: yesOrientalia Suecana, 2023
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  

*Mököröön > Mögürüön ~ Möŋürüön ‘Megüren’: One Ethnonym of Buryat Origin in Yakut Discourse Revisited

open access: yesМонголоведение, 2022
Introduction. The article examines the onym Megüren (Yak. Möŋürüön < Mögürüön) used as a name of several administrative units in the territory of Yakutia, mainly those included in Meginsky (Yak. Mäŋä) District. The available 17th-century written sources —
Bair Z. Nanzatov, Vladimir V. Tishin
doaj   +1 more source

Large‐Scale Genomics Reveals Three‐Source Ancestry and Layered Adaptation to High Altitude in Tibetan Chickens

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
Whole‐genome analysis of 1,054 chickens reveals three ancestral sources (NWC, SYA, and SHF) with distinct temporal entry patterns into the Tibetan Plateau. Route‐specific selection scans, calibrated against a demographic null, suggest complementary functional enrichments—vascular homeostasis (NWC), calcium signaling and cardiac adaptation (SYA), and ...
Zongyi Zhao   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

Lexis Denoting Some Traditional Meat, Flour and Vegetable Products in the Khalkha Mongolian, Buryat and Kalmyk Languages

open access: yesOriental Studies, 2018
The article analyzes lexis denoting traditional foods and products of the Mongolian peoples – Khalkha-Mongols, Buryats and Kalmyks. Meat cooking methods include cooking in water (Kh.-Mong. chansan makh, Bur. shanaγan myakhan, Kalm. chansn makhn), frying (
S. M. Trofimova
doaj   +1 more source

Sustainable Materials Design With Multi‐Modal Artificial Intelligence

open access: yesAdvanced Science, EarlyView.
Critical mineral scarcity, high embodied carbon, and persistent pollution from materials processing intensify the need for sustainable materials design. This review frames the problem as multi‐objective optimization under heterogeneous, high‐dimensional evidence and highlights multi‐modal AI as an enabling pathway.
Tianyi Xu   +8 more
wiley   +1 more source

TÜRK DİLLERİ – BİR AİLE PORTRESİNİN ANA HATLARI [PDF]

open access: yesFolklor/Edebiyat, 2017
The article deals with the history and the development of the Turkic languages from the first traces of Turkic until today. It provides the reader with an overview about the languages of the Modern Turkic, the Middle Turkic and the Ancient Turkic ...
Claus Schönig*   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

Morbidity Among the Aging Population in Northern Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Study

open access: yesAGING MEDICINE, EarlyView.
Multimorbidity (≥ 2 chronic diseases) is common among aging populations, yet evidence from Bangladesh remains limited. A cross‐sectional survey of 540 older adults in Northern Bangladesh (June–August 2022) assessed multimorbidity using interviews and logistic regression analysis. Multimorbidity prevalence was 75.74% (95% CI: 71.9%–79.3%).
Md. Abu Sayem   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Aspects of Polysemy in Turkic and Mongolic Languages(Evidence from Kalmyk and Uighur Languages)

open access: yesOriental Studies, 2018
With evidence from Kalmyk and Uighur languages, the article discusses some features of polysemous lexical forms in the light of modern psycholinguistic approaches and aspects of cognitive linguistics.
Vladimir N. Mushaev   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

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