Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Compare, for example, Ringe, Warnow, and Taylor (2002), who posit an Italo-Celtic subgroup (although they admit the evidence is slender), with the criticisms of Isaac (2004: 54 ff.), who calls the Italo-Celtic hypothesis obsolete. – Nicholas Zair; p. 2035: This concludes the possible cases of Italo-Celtic isoglosses. Despite the continuing ...

  2. Apr 5, 2024 · Insular Celtic refers to the Celtic languages of the British Isles, together with Breton (spoken in Brittany, France). As the name Breton implies, it is an importation from Britain and is not a Continental Celtic dialect. Although there is some scanty evidence from classical sources—mainly place-names—and a small body of inscriptions in the ...

  3. Hellenic. The branch of the Indo-European family of languages that includes the various dialects of Greek. High German. The literary and official language used throughout Germany and Austria. Indo-European. Having to do with a group of related languages in India, western Asia, and Europe. Italo-Celtic. The form of the Italic which was spoken in ...

  4. The Phrygian language. Phrygian is one of the oldest and least attested Indo-European languages. It is far from being completely understood and decipherment is still in progress. Unlike other poorly attested languages, Phrygian has written records in the Phrygian and later the Greek alphabet.

  5. 9.1 Introduction . This chapter provides an outline of the defining characteristics of the Celtic proto-language and the internal divisions within Celtic. Only languages which are clearly identifiable as Celtic will be included in this treatment, i.e. Goidelic, Brittonic, Gaulish (including Cisalpine, Transalpine and the onomastic material from Central European and Balkanic Celtic ...

  6. The Indo-European k-aorist. Frederik Kortlandt. The k-aorist originated from a common development of Italic, Greek, Phrygian, Balto-Slavic, Indo-Iranian and Tocharian and may not be dated later than non-Anatolian Indo-European. The k-perfect developed from the resultative interpretation of the k-aorist.

  7. Phrygian. Phrygian was an Indo-European language related to Dacian and Thracian and belonging to the Paleo-Balkan branch of languages. It was spoken in Central Asia Minor until about the 5th century AD. The earliest known inscriptions in Phyrgian date from the 8th century BC and were written in an alphabet derived from Phoenician.

  1. People also search for