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  1. Proto-Indo-European dictionary-translator. This is the English version of Academia Prisca 's automatic Proto-Indo-European dictionary-translator. This translator is based on the Late Proto-Indo-European Etymological Lexicon by Fernando López-Menchero: The work contains correct usage of Late Proto-Indo-European words - with emphasis on North ...

  2. The Proto-Italic language is the ancestor of the Italic languages, most notably Latin and its descendants, the Romance languages. It is not directly attested in writing, but has been reconstructed to some degree through the comparative method .

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  4. The current version, PIE Lexicon Pilot 1.1, presents digitally generated data of hundred most ancient Indo-European languages with three hundred new etymologies for Old Anatolian languages, Hitttite, Palaic, Cuneiform Luwian and Hieroglyphic Luwian, arranged under two hundred Indo-European roots.

  5. Numbers in Proto-Italic. How to count in Proto-Italic, the reconstructed ancestor of the Italic languages that was originally spoken north of the Alps from about 2,500 BC, and later in the Italian peninsula. If any of the numbers are links, you can hear a recording by clicking on them. If you can provide recordings, please contact me . Numeral.

  6. Proto-Italic verb conjugation. The Proto-Italic language is the ancestor of the Italic languages, most notably Latin and its descendants, the Romance languages. It is not directly attested in writing, but has been reconstructed to some degree through the comparative method.

  7. Etymology (Brythonic words): possibly from Proto-Brytonic *ɨskʉb (sheaf), from Latin scōpa (branch of a plant, broom, besom), from Proto-Italic *skōpās, from Proto-Indo-European *skeh₂p-(rod, shaft, staff, club) . The Goidelic words were probably borrowed from a Brythonic language .

  8. There are a number of shared phonological developments unique to the Italic languages that cannot be shown to be the result of convergence and thus are good candidates for defining innovations of Proto-Italic.

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