「Indoeuropean」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 163件
ons, the Yok-Utian family may be as old as | Indo-European, and the Klamath appear to have lived in t |
social organization dominated by males) of | Indo-European and other societies, versus what she propo |
res as a result of creolization between an | Indo-European and a non-Indo-European language. |
went into Hittite, a very early branch of | Indo-European, as “army”. |
Very likely, it is not | Indo-European at all, but is Pre-Indo-European. |
as proof that the Pictish language was not | Indo-European, being variously read as |
rom Proto-Indo-European and that all other | Indo-European branches have undergone a period of common |
It is the | Indo-European building standing on a 10-acre (40,000 m2) |
is what has been alleged to be the oldest | Indo-European calendar, based on Orion cycle, shown by p |
peculative attempts have been made to find | Indo-European cognates outside the Germanic group. |
erived from the Sanskrit language, and are | Indo-European cognates of the English mead, Greek μέθν, |
4. | Indo-European Comparative Linguistics |
bly best known for his glottalic theory of | Indo-European consonantism and for placing the Indo-Euro |
ry, "Kuro-Araxes Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
llory, "Poltavka Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
lory, "Khvalynsk Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
997), "Afanasevo Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn . |
"Lower Mikhaylovka group", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
lory, "Cernavoda Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
allory, "Usatavo Culture", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
allory, "Baalberge group", Encyclopedia of | Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997. |
at the time fairly conservative remnant of | Indo-European culture. |
Encyclopedia of | Indo-European culture. |
parallels similar mythological rivers from | Indo-European cultures like the Greek Styx. |
f the type later associated with expanding | Indo-European cultures to the West. |
and activities in the history of Western, | Indo-European cultures is intrinsically identical to mis |
haeological horizon) underlying all modern | Indo-European cultures. |
uistics, mythology and theater, as well as | Indo-European, Dravidian, Munda and Pan-Indian linguisti |
subraces, the latter corresponding to the | Indo-European ethno-linguistic phylum. |
r's Old Norse Etymological Database in the | Indo-European Etymological Database online at Leiden Uni |
text is made up of complex arguments about | Indo-European etymologies which would have seemed old-fa |
l, appear to be non-Semitic in origin, and | Indo-European etymologies have been suggested. |
0 year old girl and a 35 year old man with | Indo-European faces, believed to be over 1,500 years old |
ich belongs to neither the Semitic nor the | Indo-European families but to the Hurro-Urartian family |
n sub-branch of the Germanic branch of the | Indo-European family of languages. |
Armenian is a sub-branch of the | Indo-European family, and with some 8 million speakers o |
Thus the | Indo-European father-god appears under various names: Ze |
dents during ancient times belonged to the | Indo-European group and they spoke a Proto-Indo-European |
Michelson studied | Indo-European historical linguistics at Harvard Universi |
Aryan is also known as "Late PIE" or "Late | Indo-European" (LIE), suggesting that Greco-Aryan forms |
ola, 'The formation of the Aryan branch of | Indo-European', in Blench and Spriggs (eds), Archaeology |
e about the position of the Roma, who were | Indo-European in origin, speaking an Indo-Aryan language |
a culture, all of which are believed to be | Indo-European in nature, particularly within the context |
The name Biryawaza is | Indo-European in origin. |
times considered to be of Scythian (Saka), | Indo-European, Indo-Iranian or Indo-Aryan stock in view |
t the Hunnic language could have also been | Indo-European instead of Turkic. |
theon, dating back to the Neolithic before | Indo-European invasion of Europe. |
Indo-European isoglosses, including the centum and satem | |
e languages in antiquity, or directly from | Indo-European itself. |
n or Tokharian is an extinct branch of the | Indo-European language family. |
Finnish is not an | Indo-European language and therefore unrelated to German |
Germanic language, Gothic is a part of the | Indo-European language family. |
These ancient Veneti spoke Venetic, an | Indo-European language akin to, but distinct from Latin |
The Luwian language was part of the | Indo-European language group, with close ties to the Hit |
a language of the Indo-Iranian part of the | Indo-European language family, and live in a tribal cult |
ient Hittite language, identified it as an | Indo-European language and laid the groundwork for the d |
that the terms found in the reconstructed | Indo-European language are not compatible with the cultu |
They speak Ossetic, an | Indo-European language of the East Iranian branch, altho |
is that "reality" (although a noun in most | Indo-European language systems, and therefore commonly c |
A. Richard Diebold Center for | Indo-European Language and Culture |
It is clear that Armenian is an | Indo-European language, but its development is opaque. |
the Philistines did originally speak some | Indo-European language. |
arn something about the similarity between | Indo-European languages -- a cognate is not an etymology |
Germanic languages are a group of extinct | Indo-European languages in the Germanic family. |
part of the Eastern Iranian branch of the | Indo-European languages family. |
examined the possibility that Chinese and | Indo-European languages derived from a common source. |
inflected language, like the other ancient | Indo-European languages such as its own mother Sanskrit. |
bs do not conjugate like the verbs of most | Indo-European languages such as English or Spanish. |
sumed to have left traces within all other | Indo-European languages as well, its influence would hav |
djectives and verbs; very few known living | Indo-European languages retain this feature as a product |
While | Indo-European languages tend to make tense distinctions |
ack to the Bronze Age and to a time before | Indo-European languages had developed in central, northe |
y "Indigenous Aryan" scenario, speakers of | Indo-European languages must have left India at some poi |
Indo-European languages | |
Indo-European, and are paralleled in other | Indo-European languages such as Greek: leipo leloipa eli |
In The | Indo-European Languages, eds. A. G. Ramat and P. Ramat, |
tvelian are highly similar to those of the | Indo-European languages, and so it is widely thought tha |
In | Indo-European languages, there were two concepts regardi |
of words meaning 'man,' 'hero,' in various | Indo-European languages, and all the Nart corpora have a |
Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate | Indo-European languages, Monier Monier-Williams, revised |
mpendium of the Comparative Grammar of the | Indo-European Languages, in which he attempted to recons |
It belongs to the Indo-Aryan branch of the | Indo-European languages. |
nates in Sanskrit and has cognates in most | Indo-European languages. |
names exist in Avestan language and other | Indo-European languages. |
e-nonreflexive division of voices found in | Indo-european languages. |
be seen originally to be occurring in the | Indo-European languages. |
st known for extensive comparative work on | Indo-European languages. |
developments occurring in Latin and other | Indo-European languages. |
attested Slavic languages as well as other | Indo-European languages. |
Lindeman works mainly with | Indo-European languages. |
sts based on similarities found across all | Indo-European languages. |
lands, studied Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, and | Indo-European linguistics at Leiden University, and in 1 |
ssor of comparative philology, comparative | Indo-European linguistics and Old Norse at Christiania U |
ch at the Sorbonne in Indo-Aryan, Slav and | Indo-European Linguistics, Greek and Latin. |
sity of London where he studied Phonology, | Indo-European Linguistics, Prakrit, Persian, old Irish, |
articles and books, chiefly on historical | Indo-European linguistics, especially Greek, Tocharian a |
Biryawaza may have been of an | Indo-European maryannu caste similar to that which ruled |
To show how | Indo-European might have looked he created a short tale, |
's and the Kurgan hypotheses suggests that | Indo-European migrations are somehow related to the disp |
with Tamaz Gamkrelidze on a new theory of | Indo-European migrations, which was most recently advoca |
It could also be a reconstruction of the | Indo-European mori or Greek words for Black Sea, μόρυχος |
to Peisker's theory with their studies of | Indo-European myth about the battle of a Storm god and a |
s mediator are clearly influences from the | Indo-European mythologies of the nearby Iranians, Slavs |
threefold death is a theme common to many | Indo-European mythologies, and according to Georges Dume |
u deals with Sumerian/Ancient Egyptian and | Indo-European mythology and history. |
1962 to 2002, his main research areas were | Indo-European mythology and folklore, King Arthur and th |
Since the nominative of | Indo-European nouns often ended in *-s and it seems to h |
In recognizing the Hittite language as | Indo-European on the basis of two letters found in Egypt |
derived from the root -visl- 'flowing,' of | Indo-European origin (compare the Vistula River). |
ally accepted origin, the word could be of | Indo-European origin, since a similar form (daina) can b |
logical treatments of all Hittite words of | Indo-European origin. |
The name Allan is of Pre-Celtic | Indo-European origin. |
remains obscure though they certainly had | Indo-European origins and even their tribal name might b |
of the leading answers to the question of | Indo-European origins, it is still a speculative model a |
rchaeology and Language: The Puzzle of the | Indo-European Origins, a book on the Proto-Indo-European |
hristian aspects and focused on the ancient | Indoeuropean paganisms, even though during the war he ha |
name for the main deity in the tentatively | Indo-European pantheon of the Yazidi, Malek Taus, is Sha |
If the | Indo-European penetration of Europe can be regarded as a |
al to the "Hatti", the Hittites, a western | Indo-European people (belonging to the linguistic "kentu |
rom the Tiele in central Asia, mixing with | Indo-European people, would later emerge as the Uyghur g |
iography with the first identified wave of | Indo-European peoples who entered in Italy and took over |
noted the possibility of a sea invasion of | Indo-European peoples from mainly Anatolia. |
wley that argues against the theories that | Indo-European peoples arrived in India in the middle of |
youth) are held to have been common to all | Indo-European peoples according to a school of thought e |
The | Indo-European perfect took o-grade in the singular and z |
The | Indo-European perfect originally carried its own set of |
The reduplication characteristic of the | Indo-European perfect remains in a number of verbs (seen |
chwa in Greek and some related problems of | Indo-European phonology (1982) |
m Old English Idun, itself a derivative of | Indo-European pid, meaning "a spring, water". |
The custom is by no means restricted to | Indo-European populations, but is continued by Turkic tr |
g "eternal flames" is a feature of ancient | Indo-European pre-Christian spirituality. |
the published solar myths may date back to | Indo-European prehistory. |
primary scholarly concern was the study of | Indo-European religion, where his work came to criticize |
The element is linked to the | Indo-European root *bhel- ‘shine' . |
Its original form was Alauna, from the | Indo-European root *el-/ol-, meaning "to flow, to stream |
uropean (pre-Celtic) name *Plowonida, from | Indo-European roots *plew-, which underlies words in dif |
from the Old Norse gata, path; see gh- in | Indo-European roots. |
(For the missing s see | Indo-European s-mobile.) |
Many | Indo-European societies know a threefold division of pri |
ncestor, the "cultural trajectory" for the | Indo-European societies of this region need to be seen a |
In | Indo-European societies, an analogy is derived from the |
Beg and Yabghu-not of Turko-Mongol, but of | Indo-European Sogdian origin. |
Osthoff's law is an | Indo-European sound law which states that long vowels sh |
on-native speakers attempting to pronounce | Indo-European sounds, and that they resorted to the clos |
Indo-European speakers followed them from Sri Lanka in t | |
loids and Caucasoids, and in Dravidian and | Indo-European speakers . |
the earliest settlers of this area is the | Indo-European speaking Tocharians, who had populated the |
incompatible with his core assumption that | Indo-European spread with the advance of agriculture. |
t stationed at the city and capital of the | Indo-European statelet Kucha, Khotan, Kashgar and Karash |
orthern Italy, and many others are most of | Indo-European stock; main historic peoples of non-Indo-E |
In: Journal of | Indo-European Studies 34, 2006, No. 3/4, p. 273-318. |
While at Yale, Emeneau began Sanskrit and | Indo-European studies with the Sanskritist Franklin Edge |
His areas of interest include | Indo-European studies and Indian grammatical theory, in |
He studied classical philology and | Indo-European studies at the Universities of Heidelberg |
He studied | Indo-European studies, Comparative linguistics, General |
In | Indo-European studies, the term "Caland system" is named |
a fairly large number of words loaned from | Indo-European, such as the Proto-Kartvelian m.k.erd (bre |
holars agree that it is a remnant of pagan | Indo-European times that has adapted to Christianity. |
esent-day Bugur with an aim to protect the | Indo-European Tocharian statelets of the region and kept |
A prominent example is the | Indo-European verbal noun suffix *-tis, which survived a |
All | Indo-European verbs that passed into Germanic as functio |
enaean words, the occasional resolution of | Indo-European vocalic r to -or/ro- instead of -ar/ra-; t |
hop music, Buddhism, African spirituality, | Indo-European Vodoun, Jazz, Afrofuturism, urban culture |
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