Monday, September 19, 2016

INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGE















https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgAi-hi1-wji8y8d-IrNQYvxMvvvBpcil2HxA0TfYLPZjNoAcxlK9QDC8X9QF1VbXMx1Enu8gLBxSqGnOS1zn45lazPQU6gf0fsrcSlEi6CHelceIAHH1li-DSs6unI6nMkW6X1UAsh7Q4/s1600/Mapa+lenguas+indoeuropeas.gif
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\

hypothesis that most European languages and others (in India, parts of the Middle East, and Asia) are cognates (are related, as a family, by common origins) notion of a common ancestor language, the Indo-European language, which was the origin of Sanskrit, Persian, Latin, Greek, Romance, Germanic and Celtic languages

DESCENDANTS OF THE COMMON INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGE
Indo-European Language Subfamilies and examples:
  • Indo-Iranian (Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali, Persian)
  • Hellenic (Greek)
  • Armenian (Western Armenian, Eastern Armenian)
  • Balto-Slavic (Russian, Polish, Czech, Lithuanian)
  • Albanian (Gheg, Tosk)
  • Celtic (Irish Gaelic, Welsh)
  • Italic (Latin, Spanish, Italian, French)
  • Germanic (German, English, Danish, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian)
  • Anatolian (extinct) (Hittite)
  • Tocharian (extinct) (Tocharian A, Tocharian B)

No comments:

Post a Comment