Results 111 to 120 of about 1,765 (221)
Turkic pronouns against a Uralic background
Although nobody doubts today that a Ural-Altaic protolanguage is an obsolete idea there still exists some peculiar conformity between Uralic and Altaic that cannot easily be ex-plained by simple borrowings.
Stachowski, Marek
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Societies of strangers do not speak less complex languages. [PDF]
Shcherbakova O +8 more
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Bakró-Nagy Marianne. The Uralic Languages. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 90, fasc. 3, 2012. Langues et littératures modernes. Moderne taal en letterkunde. pp.
Bakró-Nagy, Marianne
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The Origins and Migrations of the Uralic People
After identifying the Uralic-speaking peoples (Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic), the author briefly describes the history of the Uralic theory. The term "Uralic" was introduced under the supposition that the homeland of these peoples was located near the Urals.
Emil Heršak
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The Uralic-Yukaghiric connection revisited: Sound Correspondences of Geminate Clusters
This paper presents and discusses regular correspondences between Uralic geminate items and Yukaghiric with proposed sound change laws and new and some modified older cognate suggestions (twenty-four nouns and eight verbs).
Piispanen, Peter Sauli, +1 more
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This introductory paper presents the context and current challenges of Uralic syntactic studies. The brief summary of seven selected papers from the SOUL-4 conference published in the present issue is followed by an overview of six topics from the ...
Maria Ovsjannikova, Fedor Rozhanskiy
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Morphology in Uralic Languages
Uralic languages are synthetic, agglutinative languages, overwhelmingly suffixing, and they have a rich inflectional morphology in both the nominal and the verbal domain. The Uralic family includes about 30 languages spoken in Europe and in North Eurasia
Krisztina Hevér-Joly +3 more
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C. C. Uhlenbeck on Indo-European, Uralic and Caucasian
In his early years, C. C. Uhlenbeck was particularly interested in the problem of the Indo-European homeland (1895, 1897). He rejected Herman Hirt’s theory (1892) that the words for ‘birch’, ‘willow’, ‘spruce’, ‘oak’, ‘beech’ and ‘eel’ point to Lithuania
Kortlandt, Frederik H. H.
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Studies in Uralic vocalism II: reflexes of Proto-Uralic *a in Samoyed, Mansi and Permic
Решетников Кирилл. Studies in Uralic vocalism II: reflexes of Proto-Uralic *a in Samoyed, Mansi and Permic [Электронный ресурс] / Kirill Reshetnikov, Mikhail Zhivlov// Вопросы языкового родства. - 2011. - Вып. 5. - С. 70-109. - (Вестник РГГУ.
Решетников Кирилл +1 more
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Food Risk Analysis: Towards a Better Understanding of "Hazard" and "Risk" in EU Food Legislation. [PDF]
Cioca AA, Tušar L, Langerholc T.
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