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  1. It is possible that Illyrian, Dacian and Thracian were three dialects of the same language, according to Rădulescu. [170] Georgiev (1966), however, considers Illyrian a language closely related to Venetic and Phrygian but with a certain Daco-Moesian admixture. [174]

  2. The Illyrian language (/ ɪ ˈ l ɪr i ə n /) was an Indo-European language or group of languages spoken by the Illyrians in Southeast Europe during antiquity. The language is unattested with the exception of personal names and placenames.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DaciansDacians - Wikipedia

    Some historians and linguists consider Dacian language to be a dialect of or the same language as Thracian. [142] [216] The vocalism and consonantism differentiate the Dacian and Thracian languages. [217] Others consider that Dacian and Illyrian form regional varieties (dialects) of a common language. (Thracians inhabited modern southern ...

  4. The relation between Dacian (if there was one single Dacian language) and Latin cannot be more than between two different Indo-European languages. This is the protocronist view on Dacians, the Romanian version of Protochronism .

  5. Some historians and linguists consider Dacian language to be a dialect of or the same language as Thracian. The vocalism and consonantism differentiate the Dacian and Thracian languages. Others consider that Dacian and Illyrian form regional varieties (dialects) of a common language.

    • are dacian and illyrian a common language based1
    • are dacian and illyrian a common language based2
    • are dacian and illyrian a common language based3
    • are dacian and illyrian a common language based4
    • are dacian and illyrian a common language based5
  6. Mar 28, 2008 · Associated with the so-called Lusatian civilization, the concept of ‘Illyrian’ has been misused by a whole generation of scholars to characterize a wave of apparently Indo-European movements in various parts of Europe and even the Middle East.

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  8. based on his study of the phonetic dierences between Dacian and racian versus the Indo-European, issued the conclusion that Dacian and racian were two dierent Indo-European languages: IE b, d, g > Dacian b, d, g, racian p, t, k; IE ē > Dacian ä, racian ē (later i); IE e (after consonant) > Dacian ie (ia), racian e; IE ai > Dacian a; racian

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