Proto-Chlesamnic: Difference between revisions

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'''Proto-Chlesamnic''' (P-Chl) is the common linguistic anscestor to the [[Chlesamnic]] languages. No direct evidence of this language exists, however its features have been [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic%20reconstruction reconstructed] based on features of documented Chlesamnic languages.
It was spoken between 1800 BCE all the way up to 600 AD, though the first divergences had occurred long before, with the first divergences around 100 BCE. Their theorized homeland is around [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Balkhash Lake Balkhash], where we get the name for the family from.
{{Infobox language
{{Infobox language
|name=Proto-Chlesamnic
|name=Proto-Chlesamnic
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|fam2=Para-Germanic
|fam2=Para-Germanic
|fam3=[[Chlesamnic]]
|fam3=[[Chlesamnic]]
|ancestor1=[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European%20language Proto-Indo-European]
|ancestor1=[[w:Proto-Indo-European|Proto-Indo-European]]
|ancestor2=Pre-Proto-Germanic  
|ancestor2=Pre-Proto-Germanic  
|iso3=pchl
|iso3=chle-pro
|familycolor=indo-european
|familycolor=indo-european
}}
}}
'''Proto-Chlesamnic''' (P-Chl) is the common linguistic anscestor to the [[Chlesamnic]] languages. No direct evidence of this language exists, however its features have been [[w:Linguistic reconstruction|reconstructed]] based on features of documented Chlesamnic languages.
It was spoken between 1800 BCE all the way up to 600 AD, though the first divergences had occurred long before, with the first divergences around 100 BCE. Their theorized homeland is around [[w:Lake Balkhash|Lake Balkhash]], where we get the name for the family from.

Latest revision as of 20:17, 6 July 2026

Proto-Chlesamnic
P-Chl
Created by
Indo-European
Early forms
Proto-Indo-European
  • Pre-Proto-Germanic
Language codes
ISO 639-3chle-pro


Proto-Chlesamnic (P-Chl) is the common linguistic anscestor to the Chlesamnic languages. No direct evidence of this language exists, however its features have been reconstructed based on features of documented Chlesamnic languages.

It was spoken between 1800 BCE all the way up to 600 AD, though the first divergences had occurred long before, with the first divergences around 100 BCE. Their theorized homeland is around Lake Balkhash, where we get the name for the family from.