Many of South Africa's linguisticgroups share a common ancestry.
2
Three major haplogroups, namely H, O and R, are shared across the four linguisticgroups.
3
There are thousands of dialects in Africa -Chad alone has two hundred distinct linguisticgroups.
4
The genomic architecture of African populations is poorly understood and there is considerable variation between ethno- linguisticgroups.
5
Much of the early history of academic linguistics was spent reconstructing European "proto-languages", our best guesses at earlier forms of familiar linguisticgroups.
1
This was bigger than languagegroups, she said, bigger than families.
2
Members of other languagegroups feel the same way.
3
Dagestan is home to more than 40 languagegroups.
4
The songlines or tracks transcend the languagegroups.
5
These bishops faced a problem in uniting two different languagegroups of Christians under a single authority.
1
The Ahom language is the oldest member of the Tai branch of the Siamese-Chinese linguisticfamily of which we have any record.
2
The Kra-Dai linguisticfamily includes Thai and Lao as well as a great number of languages spoken by ethnic minorities in Southeast Asia.
3
On the Pacific side of the continent not one of the forty linguisticfamilies made pottery.
4
The Maya LinguisticFamily.
5
The writer of this review had confidently expected an authoritative large-scale map showing the distribution of linguisticfamilies, dialects, and tribes.
1
Researchers say the tribe is a subgroup of the Pano linguisticgroup.
2
In fact, no relationship of the Maya linguisticgroup to any other has been discovered.
3
Many of South Africa's linguisticgroups share a common ancestry.
4
Three major haplogroups, namely H, O and R, are shared across the four linguisticgroups.
5
There are thousands of dialects in Africa -Chad alone has two hundred distinct linguisticgroups.
1
Give the main characteristics of the Italic familyoflanguages.
2
The Indo-European familyoflanguages far surpasses the Semitic in variety, flexibility, beauty, and strength.
3
Sanskrit, you know, is the eldest brother of all the familyoflanguages to which our English belongs.
4
In this way we may trace a whole familyoflanguages, and with it a kinship of descent, from Hindustan to Ireland.
1
But the languagefamilies closest to Austronesian are thought to be Tai-Kadai, Austroasiatic, and Miao-Yao.
2
In Chapter 15 I explained that most New Guinea languages , termed Papuan languages , are unrelated to any languagefamilies elsewhere in the world.
3
The other three families have fragmented distributions, being spoken by "islands" of people surrounded by a "sea" of speakers of Chinese and other languagefamilies.
4
From the initial indications of family-like relations up to the establishment of languagefamilies, the time span is greater than 15,000 years.
1
This identification changed when agriculture started and familiesoflanguages ascertained themselves.
2
The speech of the Basques in the Pyrenees has nothing in common with the European familiesoflanguages.
3
Nor are we at all certain of the relation, if any, in which the greater familiesoflanguages stand to each other.
4
Whatever it was, it covered a wide area, larger than the area covered by many familiesoflanguages in India at the present day.
5
The major familiesoflanguages are associated, as archaeological and linguistic data prove, with places where the new pragmatic context of agriculture was established.
1
On the Pacific side of the continent not one of the forty linguisticfamilies made pottery.
2
The writer of this review had confidently expected an authoritative large-scale map showing the distribution of linguisticfamilies, dialects, and tribes.
3
Attention is frequently called to the large number of linguisticfamilies in America, nearly 100 having been named, embracing over 1000 languages and dialects.
Ús de language family en anglès
1
That language was part of the Austronesian languagefamily, or Malay-Polynesian, that included both Filipino and modern Chamorro languages, he said.
2
The origin of all these languages is outside the continent, except for Arabic, the Afro-Asiatic languagefamily, which is spoken by North African Arabic countries.
3
But the languagefamilies closest to Austronesian are thought to be Tai-Kadai, Austroasiatic, and Miao-Yao.
4
In Chapter 15 I explained that most New Guinea languages , termed Papuan languages , are unrelated to any languagefamilies elsewhere in the world.
5
The other three families have fragmented distributions, being spoken by "islands" of people surrounded by a "sea" of speakers of Chinese and other languagefamilies.
6
From the initial indications of family-like relations up to the establishment of languagefamilies, the time span is greater than 15,000 years.