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Revision as of 03:23, 18 February 2018
The Talmic languages (/ˈtɑːlmɪk/ TAHL-mik, from Eevo Talma /ˈtʰãmə/, the name of a Talmic goddess; Eevo: britsa Talmiv; Bhlaoighne: ngàtha dTalmamha; Nurian: gaffar Tāmmar; Roshterian: ṟoṟbitalmim) are a family of languages spoken in the Talma (Eevo and most other Talman languages: Talma, Nurian: Tāmā /ˈtˠaːmˠaː/) region in Etalocin in the planet of Tricin. It is a subfamily of the Quihum languages.
Phylogeny
- † denotes languages that are extinct in modern Tricin.
Proto-Talmic |
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History of Talmic studies
History of the term
The Talmic family was referred to as the "Cēm languages" (Eevo: britsa Ceem) in earlier Talman works, after the Thensarian word cēm for "one" inherited in all known Talmic languages at the time. After the discovery of other Quihum languages such as Sjowaazheñ, the definition expanded to other Quihum languages, until Proto-Quihum was reconstructed with relative accuracy and the family was renamed Quihum (Eevo: britsa Cvillym or hølltu Cvillym). The designation Talmic (Eevo: Talmiv) is now applied to the branch, after the name of the Talma region where most of the Talmic languages are native to.