klotz: linguistics*

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  1. Ancient DNA points to the roots of Uralic languages in Yakutia, far east of the Ural Mountains. The genetic trail traces a remarkable prehistoric migration that reshaped Eurasia’s linguistic landscape.

    A new study using ancient DNA has revealed that the origins of the Uralic language family (including Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian) lie further east than previously thought – specifically in Yakutia, northeastern Siberia, around 4,500 years ago. Researchers, led by Harvard scientists, analyzed genomes from Siberia and across Eurasia, tracing a genetic signal westward. This challenges the long-held belief that the Uralic homeland was near the Ural Mountains.

    The study links the spread of Uralic languages to the Seima-Turbino phenomenon – a period of advanced bronze-casting and cultural exchange – and shows interaction with the Yamnaya culture (associated with the spread of Indo-European languages). While modern Uralic-speaking populations show varying degrees of Yakutia ancestry (with Hungarians having the least), the ancient DNA confirms a Siberian origin for the language family. The research also sheds light on the origins of the Yeniseian language family and potentially supports a connection between Yeniseian and North American Na-Dene languages.
  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.
  5. A collection of 23 maps and charts illustrating various aspects of language, including origins, distribution, diversity, and evolution, with a focus on English and global patterns.
  6. Harvard researchers traced the origins of the vast Indo-European language family to the Caucasus-Lower Volga region, identifying the ancestral population known as the Yamnaya, who appeared around 3300 BCE and spread from Hungary to western China.
  7. The University of Konstanz is awarding an honorary doctorate to Annie Zaenen on October 14, 2024. The event includes a workshop on Large Language Models (LLMs) in Linguistic Theory, the formal presentation of the honorary doctorate, and an excursion to Reichenau.
  8. 2024-02-23 Tags: , , , by klotz
  9. 2023-06-13 Tags: , , by klotz
  10. भक्ष्

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