The Nostratic Macrofamily and Linguistic PalaeontologyDo all or most languages in the world descend from a single proto-language ? And if so what can we tell from linguistic analysis about the speakers of this ancient tongue ? These are the two questions at the heart of this controversial book and the themes clearly outlined by Colin Renfrew in his introduction. The theory of a Nostratic proto-language is not new, but the extremely detailed presentation of historical linguistic evidence provided here is. The lists of possible linguistic roots are not for the faint-hearted, but for serious linguists they provide real meat on which to chew, and, the publishers hope, provide a solid basis for debate. |
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Akkadian Altaic Anglo-Saxon animal antelope Arabic arrow bark Berber body brother bull Central Chadic Cheremis Church Slavonic Class consonant Cushitic Czech deer denotes derived dial Dolgopolsky Drav Dravidian East Egyptian English Estonian Ewenki father female Finnish Finno-Ugric fish fruit Ge'ez Georgian goat Greek Halha Ham.-Sem Hamito-Semitic head Hebrew hide hook Hungarian husband Indo-Eur Indo-European Irish Kalmuck Kannada Kartu Kartvelian kind Lamut languages Lapp Latin letter linguistic Lithuanian macrofamily Malayalam male Manchu means Middle milk Mong Mongolian Mongolic mother Nanay Negidal Nostr Nostratic Old High German Old Indian Old Norse Old Turkic original Orok Ostyak palatal peel Persian Polish Proto-Indo-European proto-Slavic reconstruction root Russian Samoyedic Semitic sinew skin Slavic snow Sölqup South stone Syriac Tamil Tatar Telugu tree Tungusic Turkish Ulcha Uralic Vogul voiced Votyak vowel West Chadic wife wife's wild woman young Ziryene