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  1. The Palaeo-Balkan languages came into contact with Latin after the Roman expansion in the Adriatic Sea in the 2nd century BC. Of the ancient Balkan languages, aside from Greek, only the precursor of Albanian survived in the Western Balkans, reflecting different chronological layers of Latin influence through contact during the entire period of ...

  2. Italic languages, Indo-European languages spoken in the Apennine Peninsula (Italy) during the 1st millennium bc, after which only Latin survived. Traditionally thought to be a subfamily of related languages, these languages include Latin, Faliscan, Osco-Umbrian, South Picene, and Venetic. Latin, the language of Latium and Rome, began to emerge ...

  3. Nov 12, 2019 · The Origin and Expansion of the Celtic Peoples →. Before the expansion of Rome the Italian peninsula was inhabited by a variety of different, mostly Italic peoples, such as the Umbrians, Veneti and Semnintes. But they shared the peninsula with non-Italic peoples as well, such as Greeks in the South, Etruscans in the North and Celts further ...

  4. Nov 14, 2018 · The main evidence for Proto-Italo-Celtic comes from certain grammatical features common to Proto-Italic and Proto-Celtic, but not found in other Indo-European languages. For example, PIE didn't really have tense distinctions, so when its daughter languages created a past tense, they did so in different ways.

  5. Germanic: English, German, Dutch, Flemish, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic. 4. Celtic: Irish, Gaelic, Manx; Welsh, Cornish, Breton. These four branches or subfamilies developed, over many centuries, from four prehistoric proto-languages, which themselves had evolved from the common Indo-European tongue. There has often been contact among ...

  6. Dec 29, 2019 · A timeframe of 1000 BC – 1 BC would fit the borrowing of Proto-Celtic *magos, whereas Proto-Celtic *sowk-n-o ‘suck’ which has cognates in Germanic, Italic and Baltic and which Schrijver (2001: 423) ascribes to an indirect borrowing through the ‘language of the geminates’ may be earlier, due to its larger spread in Indo-European.

  7. Ligurian. Samnite. ancient Italic people, any of the peoples diverse in origin, language, traditions, stage of development, and territorial extension who inhabited pre-Roman Italy, a region heavily influenced by neighbouring Greece, with its well-defined national characteristics, expansive vigour, and aesthetic and intellectual maturity.

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