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  2. Proto-Afroasiatic language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Afroasiatic_language

    The long history of scholarship of the Semitic languages compared to other branches is another obstacle in reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic; typical features of Semitic have often been projected back to the proto-language, despite their cross-linguistic rarity and lack of correspondences in other branches.

  3. Proto-Afroasiatic homeland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Afroasiatic_homeland

    The Afroasiatic languages, as they are distributed today. The Proto-Afroasiatic homeland is the hypothetical place where speakers of the Proto-Afroasiatic language lived in a single linguistic community, or complex of communities, before this original language dispersed geographically and divided into separate distinct languages.

  4. Afroasiatic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afroasiatic_languages

    A significant minority of scholars supports an Asian origin of Afroasiatic, [72] most of whom are specialists in Semitic or Egyptian studies. [104] The main proponent of an Asian origin is the linguist Alexander Militarev, [105] who argues that Proto-Afroasiatic was spoken by early agriculturalists in the Levant and subsequently spread to ...

  5. Proto-Afro-Asiatic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Afro-Asiatic

    This page was last edited on 7 November 2018, at 00:56 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.

  6. Proto-Berber language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Berber_language

    Proto-Berber or Proto-Libyan is the reconstructed proto-language from which the modern Berber languages descend. Proto-Berber was an Afroasiatic language, and thus its descendant Berber languages are cousins to the Egyptian language, Cushitic languages, Semitic languages, Chadic languages, and the Omotic languages.

  7. Kurgan hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurgan_hypothesis

    However, after Karl Penka's 1883 [14] rejection of non-European PIE origins, most scholars favoured a Northern European origin. The view of a Pontic origin was still strongly supported, including by the archaeologists V. Gordon Childe [15] and Ernst Wahle. [16] One of Wahle's students was Jonas Puzinas, who became one of Marija Gimbutas's teachers.

  8. Proto-Human language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Human_language

    It presupposes a monogenetic origin of language, i.e. the derivation of all natural languages from a single origin, presumably at some time in the Middle Paleolithic period. As the predecessor of all extant languages spoken by modern humans ( Homo sapiens ), Proto-Human as hypothesised would not necessarily be ancestral to any hypothetical ...

  9. Cushitic-speaking peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cushitic-speaking_peoples

    Cushitic-speaking peoples are the ethnolinguistic groups who speak Cushitic languages natively. Today, the Cushitic languages are spoken as a mother tongue primarily in the Horn of Africa, with minorities speaking Cushitic languages to the north and south in Egypt, Sudan, Kenya, and Tanzania.