Indo-European and Its Closest Relatives: The Eurasiatic Language Family, Volume 2, LexiconStanford University Press - 216 Seiten |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
AINU Albanian Aleut Aliutor ALTAIC Alutiiq Amur Armenian Avestan Azerbaijani bark become Bogoras breast Canadian Inuit Central Alaskan Yupik Central Siberian Yupik Cheremis Chukchi CHUKOTIAN Chuvash Dagur dialect 9 Dobrotvorskij Enets Eskimo ESKIMO-ALEUT Estonian Eurasiatic Evenki Finnish GILYAK Glehn golian Gothic Greek Greenlandic Hattori Hittite Hungarian Illich-Svitych Indo-European Kalmyk Kamassian Kamchadal Khalkha Kolyma Komi-Zyrian Koryak Latin Latvian lian Lithuanian Manchu MIDDLE KOREAN Middle Mongolian modern Japanese modern Korean Monguor Mordvin mouth Nanai Naukan Negidal North Alaskan Inuit Old Church Slavic Old English Old High German Old Irish OLD JAPANESE Old Norse Old Prussian Old Turkic Orok Ostyak plait Poppe Proto PROTO-ALTAIC PROTO-CHUKOTIAN Proto-Eskimo Proto-Finno-Ugric PROTO-INDO-EUROPEAN Proto-Inuit Proto-Samoyed Proto-Tungus Proto-Turkic PROTO-URALIC Proto-Yupik Radliński Räsänen river root Ryukyuan Saami Samoyed Sanskrit Selkup Sirenik skin snow Southern Kamchadal Tatar Tavgy Tocharian Tsintsius Tungus Turkish Turkmen Udmurt Ulch URALIC Vogul weather Written Mongolian Yakut YUKAGHIR Yurak Tundra
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 2 - BP) into territory opened up by the melting of the Arctic ice cap. Eurasiatic-Amerind stands apart from the other families of the Old World, among which the differences are much greater and represent deeper chronological groupings.