Results 121 to 130 of about 619 (164)
Ancient genomes reveal Avar-Hungarian transformations in the 9th-10th centuries CE Carpathian Basin. [PDF]
Gerber D +14 more
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Genetic genealogy of Y-chromosome in the Zhetiru tribe of the Kazakh population from Kazakhstan. [PDF]
Zhunussova A +7 more
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Dissecting the genetic admixture and forensic signatures of ethnolinguistically diverse Chinese populations via a 114-plex NGS InDel panel. [PDF]
Yang C +10 more
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Temporal Verbals in Uralic (Uralic Studies Volume)
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Global patterns of genetic admixture reveal effects of language contact
Graff A +8 more
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American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1990
AbstractWe have analysed data of three European populations speaking non‐Indoeuropean languages: Hungarians, Lapps, and Finns. Principal coordinate analysis shows that Lapps are almost exactly intermediate between people located geographically near the Ural mountains and speaking Uralic languages, and central and northern Europeans.
GUGLIELMINO CR +3 more
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AbstractWe have analysed data of three European populations speaking non‐Indoeuropean languages: Hungarians, Lapps, and Finns. Principal coordinate analysis shows that Lapps are almost exactly intermediate between people located geographically near the Ural mountains and speaking Uralic languages, and central and northern Europeans.
GUGLIELMINO CR +3 more
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2022
Abstract The chapter presents an overview of the common protolanguage of all Uralic languages: its phonematics, morphology, morphosyntax, and lexicon. Uralic comparative linguistics is a highly developed field of research, and many aspects of the structure of Proto-Uralic can be reconstructed reasonably well.
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Abstract The chapter presents an overview of the common protolanguage of all Uralic languages: its phonematics, morphology, morphosyntax, and lexicon. Uralic comparative linguistics is a highly developed field of research, and many aspects of the structure of Proto-Uralic can be reconstructed reasonably well.
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Abstract This chapter considers the Uralic language family in connection with the genetic and cultural history of Northwest Eurasia. In the north and east, foraging economies have persisted among Uralic-speaking groups into modern times, partly combined with reindeer husbandry.
Outi Vesakoski +2 more
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Outi Vesakoski +2 more
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