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  1. Hittite belongs to the family of Anatolian languages and is among the oldest written Indo-European languages. Hittite is the modern scholarly name for the language, based on the identification of the Hatti ( Ḫatti) kingdom with the Biblical Hittites ( Biblical Hebrew: * חתים Ḥittim ), although that name appears to have been applied ...

  2. e. The Proto-Indo-European homeland was the prehistoric linguistic homeland of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE). From this region, its speakers migrated east and west, and went on to form the proto-communities of the different branches of the Indo-European language family.

  3. Meier-Brügger, Michael Indo-European Linguistics. With contributions by Matthias Fritz and Manfred Mayrhofer. Berlin/New York: de Gruyter, 2003. 386 p. ISBN 3110174332; Language-tree divergence times support the Anatolian theory of Indo-European origin, Russel D. Gray & Quesntin D. Atkinson, Nature 426, 435-439

  4. The Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) had eight or nine cases, three numbers (singular, dual and plural) and probably originally two genders (animate and neuter), with the animate later splitting into the masculine and the feminine. Nominals fell into multiple different declensions.

  5. Some are based on Indo-European languages (e.g. Krio from English in Sierra Leone and the very similar Pidgin in Nigeria, Ghana and parts of Cameroon; Cape Verdean Creole in Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau Creole in Guinea-Bissau and Senegal, all from Portuguese; Seychellois Creole in the Seychelles and Mauritian Creole in Mauritius, both from French); some are based on Arabic (e.g. Juba Arabic ...

  6. 8 de ago. de 2012 · There are two competing hypotheses for the origin of the Indo-European language family. The conventional view places the homeland in the Pontic steppes approximately 6kya. An alternative hypothesis claims the languages spread from Anatolia with the expansion of farming 8–9.5kya. Here we use Bayesian phylogeographic approaches together with ...

  7. Finnish is a member of the Finnic group of the Uralic family of languages; as such, it is one of the few European languages that is not Indo-European. The Finnic group also includes Estonian and a few minority languages spoken around the Baltic Sea and in Russia's Republic of Karelia . Finnish demonstrates an affiliation with other Uralic ...