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Hamito-Semitic
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Hamito-Semitic
Haˈmito-Seˈmitic, a. Designating the language family including Hamitic and Semitic languages. Also as n. Also Haˈmitic-Seˈmitic a. and n.1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl., Hamito-Semitic, relating to the peoples speaking Hamitic and Semitic languages which are considered members of one linguistic stock. 1936 ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Werner Vycichl
Austro-Hungarian philologist, linguist, and scholar in Berberology, Coptology, and Egyptology, as well as in the areas of Ancient Egyptian, Berber, and Hamito-Semitic In 1960, he settled with his family in Geneva, Switzerland, where, from 1973 to 1980, he was titular professor of Egyptology and Hamito-Semitic (Afroasiatic
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Semito-Hamitic
Seˌmito-Haˈmitic, a. and n. = Hamito-Semitic a. and n. Also Semitic-Hamitic a. and n.1879 E. S. Roberts tr. D. Pezzi's Aryan Philol. i. i. 46 Hence the Southern and Central African dialects, the Erythræan (Semito-Hamitic) and the Aryan. 1910 Encycl. Brit. XII. 894 The development of a grammatical ge...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Václav Blažek
His major interests include Indo-European languages, Uralic languages, Altaic languages, Afroasiatic (Hamito-Semitic) languages, Nostratic languages, Dené–Caucasian
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Comparative Semitics
Cohen also studied ancient Egyptian, and formulated new hypotheses regarding the Afroasiatic language phyla, or the 'Hamito-Semitic languages' as they of Semitic languages.
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Afro-Asiatic
Afro-Asiˈatic, a. (and n.) [f. Afro- + Asiatic a.] Of or pertaining to a family of languages found in northern Africa and western Asia, of which Arabic is the most widespread. See Hamito-Semitic a. and n. Also as n.1950 J. H. Greenberg in Southwestern Jrnl. Anthropol. Spring 57 The term Hamito-Semit...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Prehistoric Ethiopia
Ethnolinguistic diffusion
Linguistic analysis indicates that proto-Ethiopians spoke Hamito-Semitic or Afroasiatic languages in the third millennium BCE Semitic speakers of Ethiopia – their origin is generally obscured.
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Bidiyo language
In: Pelio Fronzaroli and Paolo Marrassini (eds.), Proceedings of the 10th Meeting of Hamito-Semitic (Afroasiatic) Linguistics, 411–419.
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Hermann Möller
According to Hjelmslev (1970:79), "a genetic relationship between Indo-European and Hamito-Semitic was demonstrated in detail by the Danish linguist Hermann The Hamitic family was shown to be invalid by Joseph Greenberg (1950), who consequently rejected the name Hamito-Semitic, replacing it with Afroasiatic
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Indo-Semitic languages
In principle, then, Indo-European—Hamito-Semitic was replaced by Indo-European—Afroasiatic. Hamito-Semitic". Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 6.1, 47–63.
Greenberg, Joseph H. 2005.
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Vladimir Orel
Through collaboration with he published Hamito-Semitic Etymological Dictionary (1995) which on one hand brought a number new sub-lexical comparisons, He published the following monographs:
together with Olga Stolbova, Hamito-Semitic Etymological Dictionary. Leiden: Brill, 1995 (578 pp.)
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Karl-Gottfried Prasse
Prasse took lectures in Egyptology in 1956 and was researching Hamito-Semitic languages and specialized early in Berber and Arabic dialects (Cairo dialect
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Atlantic (Semitic) languages
of the Semitic family. He considered them to have derived from languages that were related to the Mediterranean Hamito-Semitic group.
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Ethiopid race
According to John Baker (1974), in their stable form, their center of distribution was considered to be Horn of Africa, among that region's Hamito-Semitic-speaking
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Friedrich Müller (linguist)
Friedrich Müller (6 March 1834 25 May 1898) was an Austrian linguist and ethnologist who originated the term Hamito-Semitic languages for what are now Theories
According to Müller's classification, followed by Robert Needham Cust, the main subgroups of the Hamito-Semitic languages are: (1) Semitic; (2
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