Results 21 to 30 of about 11,919 (207)
A root morpheme in the Old Turkic language
The old Turkic literary language was formed on the basis of ancient Turkic dialects. In the era of the ancient Turkic kaganates, the language of runic inscriptions as a single literary language was used by various Turkic tribes or unions of tribes – Kipchaks, Oghuz, Uighurs, Turgesh, Kirghiz.
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Indirect object models in the language of Old Turkic runic monuments
The aim of our research is to identify the indirect object models that can be attributed to the original Turkic language features, using the language of the oldest written monuments that have survived to the present day as the material for analysis. We attempted to classify the discovered syntactic models, using the type of relationship between the ...
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Despite more than 200 years of research, the internal structure of the Turkic language family remains subject to debate. Classifications of Turkic so far are based on both classical historical–comparative linguistic and distance-based quantitative ...
Robbeets, M., Savelyev, A.
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“Mockery” in Buddhist and Islamic-Turkish Texts
Although Tengrist beliefs, the religious of Turkish, Mongolian and Siberian peoples, are indirectly referenced in concepts, such as kök, t(e)ŋri, kök t(e)ŋri, yèr, sub/suv, yèr sub/suv, umay, and so on, in Turkic, this ancient religion developed ...
Hasan İsi
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On the Expression of Sumer ~Sumeru Taġ in Old Uyghur TurkicTexts [PDF]
The history of faith, has been developing religious systems within the framework of narratives based on various supernatural beings since the day human beings existed on earth. Myths are one of the concepts that nurture these elements within these belief
Hasan İsi
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Paleolinguistics brings more light on the earliest history of the traditional Eurasian pulse crops [PDF]
Traditional pulse crops such as pea, lentil, field bean, bitter vetch, chickpea and common vetch originate from Middle East, Mediterranean and Central Asia^1^.
Aleksandar Medovic +7 more
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Europe: So Many Languages, So Many Cultures [PDF]
The number of different languages in Europe by far exceeds the number of countries. All European countries have national languages, and in nearly all of them there are minority languages as well, whereas all major languages have dialects.
Steinhauer, H. (Hein)
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Turkic Elements in the Floral Vocabulary of the Kalmyk Language
On the material of the Kalmyk language with reference to the Khalkha Mongolian, the Buryat languages and old Mongolian script, the article considers a thematic group of floral vocabulary to identify the Turkic-Mongolian parallels.
V. V. Kukanova, V. M. Trofimov
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The Turkic language, called Türki, the Old Kipchak or Kipchak language, which was actively used in the Mamluk state in Egypt and the Golden Horde in the 13th-15th centuries, is the proto-language of the modern Turkic languages. Most of its lexical layer,
A.A. Mustafayeva, K.K. Aubakirova
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On the name “Äšir” in the Tonyukuk Inscription
The name of the ancient Turkic ruling clan is written in Middle Chinese as 阿史那 (ā shǐ nà). Scholars have long inferred that this word is derived from the Khotan-Saka language and signifies “blue” as expressed in the forms āṣṣeina ~ āṣṣana. However, there
Asuman Baş
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