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  1. Há 4 dias · Armenian ( endonym: հայերեն [c] ( hayeren ), pronounced [hɑjɛˈɾɛn]) is an Indo-European language and the sole member of an independent branch of that language family. It is the native language of the Armenian people and the official language of Armenia. Historically spoken in the Armenian highlands, today Armenian is also widely ...

  2. Há 3 dias · Haplogroup R1a. Haplogroup R1a, or haplogroup R-M420, is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup which is distributed in a large region in Eurasia, extending from Scandinavia and Central Europe to Central Asia, southern Siberia and South Asia. [3] [2] While one genetic study indicates that R1a originated 25,000 [2] years ago, its subclade M417 ...

  3. Aegeans (meaning the populations that lived in Greece before yamnaya arrived) where mostly EEF but with a touch of CHG. There was a pulse around 3000BC, of a population that was Anatolian like the previous farmers but a bit different in that it also carried CHG. Some postulate that Minoan language arrived with these people but we can’t know ...

  4. 22 de mai. de 2024 · It was part of the diffusion of Indo-European languages from the proto-Indo-European homeland at the Pontic–Caspian steppe, a large area of grasslands in far Eastern Europe, which started in the 5th to 4th millennia BCE, and the Indo-European migrations out of the Eurasian Steppes, which started approximately in 2000 BCE.

  5. 1 de mai. de 2024 · If the origins of the Proto-Indo Anatolian language family are pushed further back in time, the probability of Armenia being the original homeland becomes even more plausible. Notably, a recent linguistic study by P. Heggarty et al. (2023) has meticulously dated the emergence of Indo-European languages to approximately 8000 years ago.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SlavsSlavs - Wikipedia

    Há 1 dia · Proto-Slavic, the supposed ancestor language of all Slavic languages, is a descendant of common Proto-Indo-European, via a Balto-Slavic stage in which it developed numerous lexical and morphophonological isoglosses with the Baltic languages.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MonotheismMonotheism - Wikipedia

    Há 3 dias · The head deity of the Proto-Indo-European religion was the god *Dyḗus Pḥ a tḗr . A number of words derived from the name of this prominent deity are used in various Indo-European languages to denote a monotheistic God. Nonetheless, in spite of this, Proto-Indo-European religion itself was not monotheistic.

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