Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. This is the main category of the Balto-Slavic languages . Information about Balto-Slavic: Edit family data. Canonical name. Balto-Slavic. Family code. ine-bsl. Common ancestor. Proto-Balto-Slavic.

  2. Balto-Slavic material culture in Bronze Age. Proto-Slavic is descended from the Proto-Balto-Slavic branch of the Proto-Indo-European language family, which is the ancestor of the Baltic languages, e.g. Lithuanian and Latvian. Proto-Slavic gradually evolved into the various Slavic languages during the latter half of the first millennium AD ...

  3. Nov 29, 2023 · The Balto-Slavic languages are most often divided into Baltic and Slavic groups. However, in the 1960s Vyacheslav Ivanov and Vladimir Toporov proposed an alternative division, suggesting that the Balto-Slavic proto-language split from the start into West Baltic, East Baltic and Proto-Slavic. With this, Ivanov and Toporov put Baltic unity in ...

  4. Slavic languages - Proto-Slavic, Balto-Slavic, Indo-European: The separate development of South Slavic was caused by a break in the links between the Balkan and the West Slavic groups that resulted from the settling of the Magyars in Hungary during the 10th century and from the Germanization of the Slavic regions of Bavaria and Austria. Some features common to Slovak and Slovene may have ...

  5. e. The Tocharian (sometimes Tokharian) languages ( / təˈkɛəriən / or / təˈkɑːriən / ), also known as the Arśi-Kuči, Agnean-Kuchean or Kuchean-Agnean languages, are an extinct branch of the Indo-European language family spoken by inhabitants of the Tarim Basin, the Tocharians. [3] The languages are known from manuscripts dating from ...

  6. Feb 16, 2020 · Still, the Balto-Slavic languages share a word that does not follow that rule, in this word the PIE *ḱ changed into *k, and not to *s or *š as it would have been expected. Such a change is characteristic of the centum languages, but not the satem Balto-Slavic. The word means 'stone, rock' and it developed so:

  7. Aug 15, 2020 · Starting in 1950 with 165 meanings, his list grew to 215 in 1952, which was so expansive that many languages lacked native vocabulary for some terms. Subsequently, it was reduced to 207, and reduced much further to 100 meanings in 1955. A reformulated list was published posthumously in 1971.

  1. People also search for