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Common Finno-Ugric spoken between 4000 B.C. to approximately 3000
B.C. in the watershed area)continental Devide) between the Volgas
Bend and the Ural Mountains ()presently Russias) Around 1200 words
could be reconstructed for this ancient language form by
comparative phonology of about 20 languages (such as Hungarian,
Finnish, Estonian, Lapp/Sami, Khanty, Mansi, Mordvin, etc.) still
spokon altogether by about 24 million non/Slavic native speakers in
oil-rich Eastern Europe and Western Siberia. Reconstrcted grammar,
syntax asnd semantics of Commoin Finno-Ugric are also discussed.
The book is a so-called "worksheet-edition." Lists, charts aare
printed in it as they came out from the computer. This will
facilitate subsequent research (especially manipulation of the data
in computers). The narrative is kept in a simple form "cablespeak'
style). The grabscripotion is uncomplicated. Diacritic marks were
only occasionally used (only c; and c" appear). Easy to read and
understand even by the general; reader. Targeted specialist of
Linguistics, Language Origins Research (LOR), Language Universals,
Cultural Anthropology, Human Prehistory, Comparative Religion Study
find here a massive amount of new information unknown or little
heeded in previous international research.
Part of a series that offers mainly linguistic and anthropological
research and teaching/learning material on a region of great
cultural and strategic interest and importance in the post-Soviet
era.
Part of a series that offers mainly linguistic and anthropological
research and teaching/learning material on a region of great
cultural and strategic interest and importance in the post-Soviet
era.
Common Finno-Ugric spoken between 4000 B.C. to approximately 3000
B.C. in the watershed area)continental Devide) between the Volgas
Bend and the Ural Mountains ()presently Russias) Around 1200 words
could be reconstructed for this ancient language form by
comparative phonology of about 20 languages (such as Hungarian,
Finnish, Estonian, Lapp/Sami, Khanty, Mansi, Mordvin, etc.) still
spokon altogether by about 24 million non/Slavic native speakers in
oil-rich Eastern Europe and Western Siberia. Reconstrcted grammar,
syntax asnd semantics of Commoin Finno-Ugric are also discussed.
The book is a so-called "worksheet-edition." Lists, charts aare
printed in it as they came out from the computer. This will
facilitate subsequent research (especially manipulation of the data
in computers). The narrative is kept in a simple form "cablespeak'
style). The grabscripotion is uncomplicated. Diacritic marks were
only occasionally used (only c; and c" appear). Easy to read and
understand even by the general; reader. Targeted specialist of
Linguistics, Language Origins Research (LOR), Language Universals,
Cultural Anthropology, Human Prehistory, Comparative Religion Study
find here a massive amount of new information unknown or little
heeded in previous international research.
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