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  1. Iranian languages are a group of genetically related languages, known from a time span of ca. 3500 years, that constitute the Iranian branch of the Indo-Iranian language group. The oldest, Avestan, is known only from later oral transmission, while Old Persian is attested in cuneiform inscriptions from the second half of the 1st millennium BCE.

  2. The Indo-Iranian languages or Indo-Iranic languages [1] [2] are the largest group of the Indo-European language family. They include the Indo-Aryan (Indic [note 1]) is the reconstructed proto-language of the Indo-Aryan languages. [3]) and Iranic (Iranian) languages. They are mostly spoken in the Indian subcontinent and the Iranian plateau.

  3. Indo-European languages, family of languages spoken in most of Europe and areas of European settlement and in much of Southwest and South Asia. The 10 main branches of the family are Anatolian, Indo-Iranian, Greek, Italic, Germanic, Armenian, Tocharian, Celtic, Balto-Slavic, and Albanian.

  4. millennium BC, people who spoke the ancestral Indo-Iranian language migrated to the south and west, settling over a wide area of the Middle East where modern Indo-Iranian languages are presently spoken. According to Ethnologue, there are 87 Iranian languages, a few of of them now extinct, and many with a very small number of speakers. They are ...

  5. Feb 12, 2024 · A new look at our linguistic roots. Linguists and archaeologists have argued for decades about where, and when, the first Indo-European languages were spoken, and what kind of lives those first speakers led. A controversial new analytic technique offers a fresh answer. By Kurt Kleiner 02.12.2024.

  6. 6 days ago · Sanskrit language. Prakrit languages. Bengali language. Punjabi language. On the Web: Louisiana State University - Division of Electrical and Computer Engineering - On The Classification Of Indic Languages (May 23, 2024) (Show more) Indo-Aryan languages, subgroup of the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. In the early 21st ...

  7. It analyses the position of Indo-Iranian within the Indo-European family tree, arguing that it may have separated relatively early and stayed in contact with several other subgroups. Chapter 15, by Tijmen Pronk, covers the Baltic and Slavic languages. It analyses the much-debated relationship between the two groups, concluding that they do ...

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