Lúsanic languages: Difference between revisions
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Lúsanic is the branch of Indo-European languages that includes the Finio-Dhannic and the Limbe-Mereian languages. All the Lúsanic languages are "[[w:Centum language|centum]]" languages and have thus merged the inherited Indo-European palatal plosives with the plain ones. It is often mistakenly believed to have been named after the mythical place ''Lúsania'' which all languages claim as their Urheimat. In fact, its name derives from the earliest known exonym of Lúsanic speakers, the Greek '''Λουσανοι''' as described by [[w:Hecataeus of Miletus|Hecataeus of Miletus]]. | Lúsanic is the branch of Indo-European languages that includes the Finio-Dhannic and the Limbe-Mereian languages. All the Lúsanic languages are "[[w:Centum language|centum]]" languages and have thus merged the inherited Indo-European palatal plosives with the plain ones. It is often mistakenly believed to have been named after the mythical place ''Lúsania'' which all languages claim as their Urheimat. In fact, its name derives from the earliest known exonym of Lúsanic speakers, the Greek '''Λουσανοι''' as described by [[w:Hecataeus of Miletus|Hecataeus of Miletus]]. | ||
The attestation of each language varies strongly with some only known through indirect sources such as Mereian while Standard Modern Dhannuá is a language with its own regulating body. Some occupy a middle position like Finian which is both known through indirect references and some recovered votive offerings. | |||
{{Infobox language family | {{Infobox language family | ||
|name = Lúsanic | |name = Lúsanic |
Revision as of 20:53, 7 December 2012
Lúsanic is the branch of Indo-European languages that includes the Finio-Dhannic and the Limbe-Mereian languages. All the Lúsanic languages are "centum" languages and have thus merged the inherited Indo-European palatal plosives with the plain ones. It is often mistakenly believed to have been named after the mythical place Lúsania which all languages claim as their Urheimat. In fact, its name derives from the earliest known exonym of Lúsanic speakers, the Greek Λουσανοι as described by Hecataeus of Miletus.
The attestation of each language varies strongly with some only known through indirect sources such as Mereian while Standard Modern Dhannuá is a language with its own regulating body. Some occupy a middle position like Finian which is both known through indirect references and some recovered votive offerings.
Lúsanic | |
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Created by | – |
Geographic distribution | In western, central, and eastern Europe. |
Linguistic classification | Indo-European
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Subdivisions |
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ISO 639-2 | luu |
Language tree
Lúsanic |
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