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  1. 5 de mai. de 2014 · The Indo-European languages have a large number of branches: Anatolian, Indo-Iranian, Greek, Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Armenian, Tocharian, Balto-Slavic and Albanian. Anatolian. This branch of languages was predominant in the Asian portion of Turkey and some areas in northern Syria. The most famous of these languages is Hittite.

  2. Indo-European: Indo-Aryan: 345 million 266 million: 610 million Spanish (excl. creole languages) Indo-European: Romance: 485 million 74 million: 559 million French (excl. creole languages) Indo-European: Romance: 81 million 229 million: 310 million Modern Standard Arabic (excl. dialects) Afro-Asiatic: Semitic — 274 million: 274 million ...

  3. Turanian languages. Turanian is an obsolete language-family proposal subsuming most of the languages of Eurasia not included in Indo-European, Semitic and Chinese . During the 19th century, inspired by the establishment of the Indo-European family, scholars looked for similarly widespread families elsewhere. [1]

  4. Augment (Indo-European) The augment is an Indo-European verbal prefix used in Indo-Iranian, Greek, Phrygian, Armenian, and Albanian, to indicate past time. [1] The augment might be either a Proto-Indo-European archaic feature lost elsewhere or a common innovation in those languages. [1] In the oldest attested daughter languages, such as Vedic ...

  5. 22 de jun. de 2020 · The Indo-European Family Tree. The Indo-European language family consists of about 445 (source: Wikipedia) living languages and a substantial amount of dead ones, which are no longer spoken today. These 445 languages form subgroups, whose names may sound familiar to some. The subgroups are: Romance, Germanic, Slavic, Baltic, Celtic, Iranian ...

  6. The New York Times, noting the longstanding debate among scholars over the origins of the Indo-European language group, stated, "Anthony is not the first scholar to make the case that Proto-Indo-European came from [the steppes of southern Ukraine and Russia], but given the immense array of evidence he presents, he may be the last one who has to."

  7. Indo-European languages On this sign in Russian memorializing an anniversary of the city of Balakhna , the word Balakhna ( Russian : Балахн а ) on the right is in the nominative case, whereas the word Balakhne ( Russian : Балахн е ) is in the dative case in Balakhne 500 Let ('Balakhna is 500 years old', literally '[There is] 500 years to Balakhna') on the front of the sign.