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  1. 2 days ago · The Phrygian epigraphical material is divided into two distinct subcorpora, Old Phrygian and New Phrygian. These attest different stages of the Phrygian language, are written with different alphabets and upon different materials, and have different geographical distributions. Old Phrygian is attested in 395 inscriptions in Anatolia and

    • After the 5th century AD
  2. 2 days ago · Today, the individual Indo-European languages with the most native speakers are English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Hindustani, Bengali, Punjabi, French and German each with over 100 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction. In total, 46% of the world's population (3.2 billion people) speaks an Indo-European ...

    • † indicates this branch of the language family is extinct
    • Proto-Indo-European
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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DaciansDacians - Wikipedia

    3 days ago · These last areas were always peripheral to the Roman province, not militarily occupied but nonetheless influenced by Rome as part of the Roman economic sphere. Here lived the free, unoccupied Carpi, often called "Free Dacians". The Aurelian retreat was a purely military decision to withdraw the Roman troops to defend the Danube.

  5. 3 days ago · A number of languages diphthongized some of the free vowels, especially the open-mid vowels /ɛ ɔ/: Spanish consistently diphthongized all open-mid vowels /ɛ ɔ/ > /je we/ except for before certain palatal consonants (which raised the vowels to close-mid before diphthongization took place).

  6. 3 days ago · The Byzantine Empire's history is generally periodised from late antiquity until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 AD. From the 3rd to 6th centuries, the Greek East and Latin West of the Roman Empire gradually diverged, marked by Diocletian's (r. 284–305) formal partition of its administration in 285, the establishment of an eastern capital in Constantinople by Constantine I in 330, and the ...

  7. May 3, 2024 · The time range for the evolution of language or its anatomical prerequisites extends, at least in principle, from the phylogenetic divergence of Homo (2.3 to 2.4 million years ago) from Pan (5 to 6 million years ago) to the emergence of full behavioral modernity some 50,000–150,000 years ago.

  8. Apr 17, 2024 · Apr 23, 2024. #3. I think map posted by Girgisjus was rightly referring to languages spoken in 550 AD. Which does explain Anatolia and Greece of that time both coming under Koine Greek. So, like John said about Phrygia the kingdom having collapsed a millennium earlier, then Phrygian the language would also likely hv disappeared by 550 AD.

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