i Register
In some senses, indo-european is marked as rare. Watch for register when choosing this word.
ADJ.
considered, finnish, great, rare, swedish, yiddish
VERB + INDO-EUROPEAN
belongs, isn't, part
INDO-EUROPEAN + NOUN
apiculture, family, group, language, languages, speakers
PREP.
among, with
ADV.
only, structurally
name
A major language family which includes many of the native languages of Europe, Western Asia and India, with notable Indic, Iranian and European sub-branches.
Proto-Indo-European: the hypothetical parent language of the Indo-European language family.
noun
A member of the original ethnolinguistic group hypothesized to have spoken Proto-Indo-European and thus to have been the ancestor for most of India and Western Eurasia.
Two theories of the origins of the Indo-Europeans currently compete. M. Gimbutas believes that early Indo-Europeans entered southeastern Europe from the Pontic Steppes starting ca. 4500 B.C. and spread from there. C. Renfrew equates early Indo-Europeans with early farmers who entered southeastern Europe from Asia Minor ca. 7000 BC and spread through the continent.
Thus, although at least one term for ‘alder’ can be reconstructed to PIE, the wide distribution of this tree prevents it from being diagnostic of the earlier location of the Indo-Europeans.
A speaker of any Indo-European language (though especially an ancient one), or a member of an Indo-European culture, who is regarded as a continuation of the Proto-Indo-Europeans in terms of language, ancestry, or cultural affinity.
To the same direction points a recent revelation made by Professor Henning who identifies the Gutians or Kutians and Tukres of the ancient Near East that occur in the cuneiform inscriptions of the end of the 3rd millennium B.C. with historical Kuchi-Tocharians, this being the earliest appearance of the Indo-Europeans in history (cf. W. Henning, the first Indo-Europeans in history, "Society and History." […]).
We Indo-Europeans are crazy about three! We see the world as earth, sky, water. We see things as having a beginning, a middle, and an end. Do you want a third example? Sure you do—you're Indo-European!
A European living in India or the Indies.
The sale of looted items persisted for a month, and quick profits were made by burghers and Indo-Europeans.
A person of mixed European and Indian or Indonesian ancestry.
adj
Of or relating to the family of languages originally spoken in Europe and Western Asia.
Of the great Indo-European family of languages the general principal was also that of one name for each individual[…]
Of or relating to the hypothetical parent language of the Indo-European language family.
Of or relating to the hypothetical group of peoples that spread early Indo-European languages.
As there is no evidence for Indo-European apiculture, we have to reckon with foreign origin for κηρός […].
Of or relating to persons of mixed European and Indian or Indonesian ancestry.
noun — the family of languages that by 1000 BC were spoken througho
noun — a member of the prehistoric people who spoke Proto-Indo Euro
adjective — of or relating to the former Indo-European people
adjective — of or relating to the Indo-European language family
Two theories of the origins of the Indo-Europeans currently compete. M. Gimbutas believes that early Indo-Europeans entered southeastern Europe from the Pontic Steppes starting ca. 4500 B.C. and sprea
WiktionaryThus, although at least one term for ‘alder’ can be reconstructed to PIE, the wide distribution of this tree prevents it from being diagnostic of the earlier location of the Indo-Europeans.
WiktionaryTo the same direction points a recent revelation made by Professor Henning who identifies the Gutians or Kutians and Tukres of the ancient Near East that occur in the cuneiform inscriptions of the end
WiktionaryOf the great Indo-European family of languages the general principal was also that of one name for each individual[…]
WiktionaryAs there is no evidence for Indo-European apiculture, we have to reckon with foreign origin for κηρός […].
WiktionaryFrom a lexical point of view, Esperanto appears to be an Indo-European language, but structurally it is an isolating language, like Chinese.
Tatoeba · #974788i Register
In some senses, indo-european is marked as rare. Watch for register when choosing this word.