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Etymologies
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Examples
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Most IE languages' representation would actually be explicable starting from a spirantized intermediate *θt, but Anatolic then has to go and torpedo that…
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops 2009
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You act as though there are no logical criticisms towards your Anatolic homeland and that my views should somehow be at its mercy.
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The Semitic borrowings (eg, "6", "7") are more telling IMO & rather point to an (earlier) Anatolic homeland, in accordance to Renfrew's ideas (eg, Gray & Atkinson 2003 Nature 426:435), no?
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It was, politically speaking, "the Anatolic theme", one of the twenty-nine provinces of the Byzantine empire from the seventh century to the eleventh century, when it became a Turkish land.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize 1840-1916 1913
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Leo and Artavasdus, commanders, respectively, of the two most important themata, the Anatolic and the Armenian, combined forces.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux 1840-1916 1913
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The first written reports concerning this clan, drafted about 2000 years BP (before present) in the Chinese historical record, Hou Hanshu, described nomadic light-haired blue-eyed Caucasians speaking an Indo-European language (probably a form of Tocharian, an extinct Indo-European tongue related to Celtic, Italic, and Anatolic (Ma and Sun, 1994).
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