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  2. Venetic language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetic_language

    Venetic alphabet. Venetic is a centum language. The inscriptions use a variety of the Northern Italic alphabet, similar to the Etruscan alphabet.. The exact relationship of Venetic to other Indo-European languages is still being investigated, but the majority of scholars agree that Venetic, aside from Liburnian, shared some similarities with the Italic languages and so is sometimes classified ...

  3. Venedic language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venedic_language

    Venedic (Wenedyk, lęgwa wenedka) is a naturalistic constructed language, created by the Dutch translator Jan van Steenbergen (who also co-created the international auxiliary language Interslavic). It is used in the fictional Republic of the Two Crowns , based on the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth , in the alternate timeline of Ill Bethisad .

  4. Venetian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_language

    A sign in Venetian reading "Here Venetian is also spoken" Distribution of Romance languages in Europe. Venetian is number 15. Venetian, [7] [8] also known as wider Venetian or Venetan [9] [10] (łengua vèneta [11] [ˈlenɡu̯a ˈvɛneta] or vèneto), is a Romance language spoken natively in the northeast of Italy, [12] mostly in Veneto, where most of the five million inhabitants can ...

  5. Indo-European languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages

    A third view, especially prevalent in the so-called French school of Indo-European studies, holds that extant similarities in non-satem languages in general—including Anatolian—might be due to their peripheral location in the Indo-European language-area and to early separation, rather than indicating a special ancestral relationship. [61]

  6. Liburnian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liburnian_language

    The language spoken by the Liburnians in classical times is basically unattested and unclassified. It is reckoned as an Indo-European language with a significant proportion of the Pre-Indo-European elements from the wider area of the ancient Mediterranean. Due to the paucity of evidence, the very existence of a distinct 'Liburnian language ...

  7. Hans Krahe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Krahe

    Hans Krahe claimed that by that time the Western languages (Germanic, Celtic, Illyrian, the so-called Italic group - the Latin-Faliscus, the Oscan-Umbrian along with Venetic-Baltic - and to some extent Slavic), though they still constituted a uniform Old European language which was to further divide later, had already dissociated from the ...