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Labial harmony in Turkic, Tungusic and Mongolic languages: an element approach
Phonology, 2018It has been observed that the trigger and target in labial harmony are sometimes required to share a particular feature. Working within the framework of Radical CV Phonology, I argue that labial harmony is always subject to further requirements, stated in terms of additional licensing relations.
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Amuric-Tungusic language contact and the Amuric homeland
2023Amuric (or Nivkh) is a shallow language family spoken on the Lower Amur and Sakhalin and with no apparent affiliation to other language families. As a consequence. reconstructing its more distant past has so far proven difficult. Conversely, extensive and prolonged borrowing between the Amuric and Ilingusic languages hal long been established.
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Materials for the Study of Tungusic Languages and Folklore
2011Volume 4 includes unique records of Orok (Uilta), a Tungusic language (dictionaries, texts, grammatical comments) noted down by Pilsudski directly from native informants at the beginning of the 20th century on Sakhalin. The original source material is identified with the help of - and confronted against - all the existing contemporary dictionaries with
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Yakut interference in North-Tungusic languages
2006Item does not contain ...
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A Significant Contribution to Tungusic Language Research: The Tungusic Languages
The long-anticipated Tungusic Languages volume, part of the Language Families series by Routledge, was finally made available to researchers in 2023 after an extensive preparation process. Within the same series, the first edition of The Turkic Languages was published in 1998, followed by an expanded second edition in 2021, while The Mongolic Languagesopenaire +1 more source
Form and pattern borrowing across Siberian Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages
2020When examining data from languages belonging to the Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic families, two virtually opposite views have been expressed: One attributes some commonalities to inheritances from a protolanguage, the other asserts that all commonalities derive from lateral feature transfer between originally unrelated groups.
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10. Ditransitive constructions in Tungusic languages
2010Andrej Malchukov, Igor’ Nedjalkov
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