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  1. Proto-Armenian, as the ancestor of only one living language, has no clear definition of the term. It is generally held to include a variety of ancestral stages of Armenian between Proto-Indo-European and the earliest attestations of Classical Armenian . It is thus not a proto-language in the strict sense, but "Proto-Armenian" is a term that has ...

  2. History. The origin of the Proto-Armenian language is subject to scholarly debate. The more genetically backed Armenian hypothesis would postulate the Armenian language as an in situ development of a 3rd millennium BC Proto-Indo-European language, [7] while the less genetically backed Kurgan hypothesis suggests it arrived in the Armenian Highlands either from the Balkans or through the Caucasus.

  3. The name Armeno-Phrygian is used for a hypothetical language branch, which would include the languages spoken by the Phrygians and the Armenians, and would be a branch of the Indo-European language family, or a sub-branch of either the proposed "Graeco-Armeno-Aryan" or "Armeno-Aryan" branches. According to this hypothesis, Proto-Armenian was a ...

  4. Jan 8, 2012 · I consider Armenian to be a "saturated" language, because of Urartian (non-IE), Luwian and Iranian influence. Proto-Armenian was probably a bit different from how Armenian is today, but in its basis it is obviously Indo-European. It just needs a little bit more attention and things clear up.

  5. t. e. Paleo-Balkan peoples and their respective languages in Eastern Europe and Anatolia between 5th and 1st century BC. The Armeno-Phrygians are a hypothetical people of West Asia (specifically of Asia Minor and the Armenian Highlands) during the Bronze Age, the Bronze Age collapse, and its aftermath. They would be the common ancestors of both ...

  6. Of his works we should mention especially: “History of the Armenian language” (AčaṙHLPatm 1940-1951), Liakatar K‘erakanut‘yun (“Complete grammar”, AčaṙLiak 1952-2005), and especially his magnificent “Armenian Etymological Dictionary” (HAB), originally published between 1926 and 1935. (6) Ačaṙyan’s traditions have been ...

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  8. "The Indo-European Basis of Proto-Armenian: Principles of Reconstruction," by Karl Horst Schmidt, from from Annual of Armenian Linguistics 11(1990), pp. 33-47, in 15 searchable pdf pages. From the Introduction: "Heinrich Hübschmann proved in 1875 that Armenian is an independent Indo-European language, not an Iranian dialect.

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