klotz: linguistics* + civilization*

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  1. Information on the Great Andamanese people, their language, history, and culture, based on two decades of research. Highlights the language as a potential sixth language family of India and genetic research supporting its distinctness.

    >"Three major points emerge from her research:

    > Great Andamanese and Jarawa-Onge languages are class apart. (Abbi 2003)

    > “We cannot rule out the possibility of multiple dispersions from Africa at different times, and also from different locations”.

    > “We may also consider positing not one but two separate migrations out of Africa into the Andamans.

    > The first one by the Great Andamanese 70,000 years ago and the second one by the Ang family, (perhaps around 50,000 years ago)” (Abbi 2008)"
  2. A pair of landmark studies has identified the originators of the Indo-European family of languages in current-day Russia about 6,500 years ago, the Caucasus Lower Volga people.

    >“We can see there was a small group of villages 5,700 to 5,300 years ago with just a couple thousand breeding individuals,” Reich said. “And then there was a demographic explosion, with these people going everywhere.”
  3. A new study suggests the European Huns shared a common language with the Xiongnu, indicating Siberian roots rather than Turkic origins. The research, based on linguistic evidence, archaeology, and genetics, points to a shared Yeniseian language family.
  4. This article discusses efforts to reconstruct Shakespeare's original pronunciation, focusing on experiments at the Globe Theatre and the linguistic evidence used to inform these reconstructions. It details three key types of evidence: contemporary observations, spellings, and rhymes/puns that only work in the original pronunciation.

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