ANATOLIAN LANGUAGES

ănˌətōˈlēən, subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see The Indo-European Family of Languages, table); the term "Anatolian languages" is also used to refer to all languages, Indo-European and non-Indo-European, that were spoken in Anatolia in ancient times. The progress made in the identification, decipherment, and analysis of the Indo-European Anatolian languages from extant texts owes much to 20th-century scholarship. These Anatolian languages were spoken in Anatolia, or Asia Minor, from about the 2d millennium b.c. and gradually became extinct during the first few centuries a.d. They include Cuneiform Hittite, Hieroglyphic Hittite, Luwian (also called Luvian or Luish), Palaic, Lycian, and Lydian. The Anatolian languages are the tongues of Indo-European-speaking invaders of Anatolia and became mixed to some extent with indigenous languages of the region. Much of the vocabulary of the Anatolian languages was apparently borrowed from these native tongues, but their grammar continued to be essentially Indo-European.

The principal known member of the Anatolian division of the Indo-European family is Hittite, the tongue of the Hittites, who entered and conquered much of Anatolia early in the 2d millennium b.c. The oldest surviving written records of Hittite, dated at about the 15th or 14th cent. b.c., are among the earliest extant remains of any Indo-European language. From c.1500 to 1200 b.c., Hittite was written both in cuneiform (a system of writing taken over from Mesopotamia) and in hieroglyphics (a form of picture writing unrelated to the hieroglyphics of Egypt). After the fall of the Hittite Empire (c.1200 b.c.) the use of cuneiform ceased, but writing in hieroglyphics continued until the 7th cent. b.c. Cuneiform and Hieroglyphic Hittite are separate but closely related languages.

A near relative of Hittite was Luwian, the Anatolian language of the now extinct Luwian people. Dominant in a large part of S Anatolia during the period of the Hittite Empire, Luwian was written in cuneiform, and its surviving documents go back to the 14th cent. b.c. In areas of N Anatolia, Palaic flourished. Also close to Hittite, it was written in cuneiform. Grammatical features common to Hittite, Luwian, and Palaic include: two genders, one of which combines masculine and feminine as a common gender and the other of which is neuter; two moods, indicative and imperative, the first of which has a present and a preterit tense; and two voices, active and middle. Lycian, a language of SW Anatolia for which there are written records dated from about the 5th to 4th cent. b.c., may have been a continuation of Luwian. Lycian was written in a form of the Greek alphabet, as was Lydian. Lydian was spoken in W Anatolia, and the surviving written records date from about the 5th to 4th cent. b.c.

See E. H. Sturtevant and E. A. Hahn, A Comparative Grammar of the Hittite Language (2d ed. 1951); J. Friedrich, Extinct Languages (tr. 1957, repr. 1971).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Anatolian Languages
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books on: Anatolian Languages  - 217 results

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...gous with that of the language of the ancient Romans...scholars still regard the Anatolian languages as representing one...Indo-Hittite proto-language, with Proto-Anatolian...an extinct proto-language, but the demise of...demon- strably related languages. The modern reconstructions...
...Hittite (and later the other Anatolian languages) was, or was not, a member...the other Indo- European languages to be considered a member...in fact an Indo-European language after all: The Indo-European...European nature of the Anatolian languages, that Meillets initial position...
...switching over to Hittite and the Anatolian family of languages for her...comparativc grammars of Afroasiatic languages under the stimu- lating...aspects of (endangered) languages of the Arawak family from...Her efforts to document languages that are on the verge of...about the categories in human language on the basis of exhaustive...
...the majority of the older languages are preposing e.g., Lat...the other Indo-European languages were indicative of extreme...broken away from the parent language before the separation of...the other Indo-European languages. This hypothesis led to...after Hittite and the other Anatolian languages had separated from...
...In Indo-European languages there is an irregular...an Indo-European language to be found with r...wish to show that the Anatolian languages once had a feminine...stems in the Anatolian languages though with uncertain...in biology. Given a language family in which in...
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journal articles on: Anatolian Languages  - 82 results

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Anatolian Corrigenda to the Etymological...Latin and the Other Italic Languages (EDLIL) was published...project: Kloekhorst 2008 for Anatolian, Alexander Lubotskys Indo...view of the history of the Anatolian languages, and, by extension...
...over the relationship of the language of the inscription to Etruscan...of the Stele The Lemnian Language Lemnian uses essentially...Phonologically it has a distinctly Anatolian character, both as to vowels...seems cognate with Anatolian languages such as Hittite. Morphologically...would be expected in a Creole language, but, for the same reason...
...Interpretation of the Etruscan Language by Damien Erwan Perrotin...considered Etruscan as an Anatolian language of sort. The...form as specifically Anatolian. Sve could be translated...utterly absent from Anatolian (Delamarre, 1987...imperfect knowledge of the language prevents us from making...
...Arnhem" family: the Maningrida languages, Gunwinyguan, Gaagudju, Maran, and Kungarakany (another language, treated as a family-level isolate...all todays indigenous Australian languages descend from the language(s) spoken by the first Aboriginal...and perhaps also the List of languages and language groups--and to keep these on the...
...Michael Weiss Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction...new book, Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction...European chapters, and the Anatolian, Indo-Iranian and Tocharian...gauh back to the proto-language, since they are only attested...attested l forms found in languages distinguishing r and l...
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magazine articles on: Anatolian Languages  - 21 results

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Anatolian Retreat: Robin Waterfield, Author of a New Book on the Greek Soldier...have recognized my frequent, exasperating encounters with people whose languages I didnt speak or understand. There were other, more scholarly insights...
...European. The Romance languages constitute one branch; other...Two branches are extinct: Anatolian (Hittite), spoken 4...A.D. That all of these languages (and many others of course) derive from a single earlier language--Proto-Indo-European...Virtually all European languages--and many of those in...
...immense proportions that allows languages to be compared at a glance...tooth in Hittite (an extinct Anatolian language) and check the cognates...Tocharian (another extinct language, once spoken in Chinese...search all of the 145 or so IE languages to see if the word has common...
...Turkic culture (secular and based on languages employing a Latin script) is battling...mass is the home of two cultures and languages, Turkish and Kurdish. Identity in Turkey...lives of 866 million people of diverse languages, religions, and ethnic groups? In...
...invitation to his fellow Anatolians to dare to be different and...people have always had two languages, wherever they live: Turkish...essentially Turkic in outlook, the language and way of life the Uyghurs...They adopted Persian as a language but they retained their Asian...the existence of a common language predicates a national Turkic...
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newspaper articles on: Anatolian Languages  - 3 results

 
 
...run by the formidable Carolina (someone whose command of languages would put most UN translators to shame), the emphasis is...uk) offers seven nights at Mardan Palace in a premium room Anatolian wing from pounds sterling950pp. Price includes daily breakfast...
...in 170 countries, he added. Scores of books in different languages, purportedly written by Mr. Oktar under the pen name Harun...series of scientific conferences have been held in central Anatolian towns during the past few months. One popular science magazine...
...run by the formidable Carolina (someone whose command of languages would put most UN translators to shame), the emphasis is...uk) offers seven nights at Mardan Palace in a premium room Anatolian wing from pounds sterling950pp. Price includes daily breakfast...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Anatolian Languages  - 5 results

 
 
...the vocabulary of the Anatolian languages was apparently borrowed...any Indo-European language. From c.1500 to...but closely related languages. A near relative of Hittite was Luwian, the Anatolian language of the now extinct...
...EUROPEAN FAMILY OF LANGUAGES, THE (table) The Indo-European Family of Languages Anatolian Hieroglypic Hittite...Plattdeutsch (see German language ) Greek Aeolic...Subfamily Group Subgroup Languages and Principal Dialects...
...adaptation from Sumerian, a different language, there were many ambiguities. A single...notably in Elam and by the Hittites (see Anatolian languages ). There are many undeciphered cuneiform...apparently representing several different languages. Cuneiform writing declined in use...
...are also called hieroglyphics (see Minoan civilization ; Anatolian languages ; Maya ; Aztec ). Interpretation of Egyptian hieroglyphics...Writing in Ancient Egypt (1958); E. A. Budge, Egyptian Language (8th ed. 1966); H. G. Fischer, Ancient Egyptian Calligraphy...
HITTITE see Anatolian languages . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.


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