Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Indo-HittiteIndo-Hittite - Wikipedia

    In Indo-European linguistics, the term Indo-Hittite (also Indo-Anatolian) refers to Edgar Howard Sturtevant's 1926 hypothesis that the Anatolian languages may have split off a Pre-Proto-Indo-European language considerably earlier than the separation of the remaining Indo-European languages.

  2. Hittite is the oldest attested Indo-European language, yet it lacks several grammatical features that are exhibited by other early-attested Indo-European languages such as Vedic, Classical Latin, Ancient Greek, Old Persian and Old Avestan.

  3. Indo-Hittite languages, hypothetical family of languages composed of the Indo-European and Anatolian languages. The term Indo-Hittite was proposed by scholars who believed that Hittite and the other closely related Anatolian languages represent a language branch at the same level as all the other

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Hittite is the oldest recorded Indo-European language, but it had remained completely unknown during the period in which Indo-European linguistics developed because its records are on clay tablets that were excavated only at the end of the 19th century. Even then, it was not identified as Indo-European until 1915, when Bedřich Hrozný made the ...

  5. Hittite language, most important of the extinct Indo-European languages of ancient Anatolia. Hittite was closely related to Carian, Luwian, Lydian, Lycian, and Palaic (see also Anatolian languages). Hittite is known primarily from the approximately 30,000 cuneiform tablets or fragments of tablets

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. The term Indo-Hittite is used by scholars who believe that Hittite and the other Anatolian languages are not just one branch of Indo-European but rather a branch coordinate with all the rest put together; thus, Indo-Hittite has been used for a family consisting of Indo-European proper plus Anatolian.

  7. This article introduces the oldest-attested Indo-European language, Hittite, also one of the first lost Anatolian languages to be deciphered. Today we have achieved a fairly sophisticated understanding of the Hittite language, as illustrated by an exhaustive recent grammar, a number of linguistic sketches, and several ongoing dictionary projects.