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Art. VIII.—The Ugor Branch of the Ural-Altaic Family of Languages

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1889
Whether the division and classification of linguistic affinities will always remain such as are propounded at the present day, or whether in due course and as a result of further research, this arrangement will have to make way for other conclusions, is not the question intended to be discussed here.
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No universality of cognitive structures? Two experiments with almost‐perfect one‐trial learning of translatable operators in a Ural‐Altaic and an Indo‐European language

Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 1974
Abstract.— One set of animated pictures showing the geometric relationships defined by 21 Swedish prepositions, and a second set showing the relationships defined by 12 Finnish case endings, were made. Strict criteria of simplicity, systematicity and minimum learning time were applied to this stimulus material.
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Introducing a new Book on the Ural-Altaic Language Classification (Towards Eurasian Linguistic Isoglosses: the Case of Turkic and Hungarian)

Altaistics and Turkology, 2014
In this article, László Marácz introduces his own book on a new approach to the Ural-Altaic language classification. The book entitled ‘Towards Eurasian Linguistic Isoglosses: the Case of Hungarian and Turkic’ (henceforth ‘Towards Eurasian Linguistic Isoglosses…’ abbreviated as TELI) develops a theory of linguistic relations across language families ...
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The Methodological Background of the Ural-Altaic Language Classification

2013
In this paper, it is argued that the linguistic properties and affinities between the so-called Uralic/Finno-Ugric languages cannot be represented in terms of a family tree model. This means that the hypothesized genetic relationship between these languages is not sufficiently argued for.
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[Some remarks on the Ural-Altaic substrate in Old Canary and Etruscan languages as a contribution to linguistic neolithic anthropology in Eurasia and North Africa].

Gegenbaurs morphologisches Jahrbuch, 1988
The suffixes of the nominal declension in the Old Canary and Etruscan languages are very similar to the corresponding elements of the Sumerian and Ural-Altaic tongues. Also many words of funeral and generally cultic provenance are derived from common roots in these languages.
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A Connection of Winter Eurasian Cold Anomaly to the Modulation of Ural Blocking by ENSO

Geophysical Research Letters, 2021
Dehai Luo, Aiguo Dai, Ian Simmonds
exaly  

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