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Dené–Caucasian languages

Dené–Caucasian is a proposed language family that includes widely-separated language groups spoken in the Northern Hemisphere: Sino-Tibetan languages, Yeniseian languages, Burushaski and North Caucasian languages in Asia; Na-Dené languages in North America; and the Vasconic languages from Europe (including Basque).

Dené–Caucasian
(widely rejected)
Geographic
distribution
scattered in Eurasia and North America
Linguistic classificationHypothetical language family
Proto-languageProto-Dené–Caucasian
Subdivisions
GlottologNone

A narrower connection specifically between North American Na-Dené and Siberian Yeniseian (the Dené–Yeniseian languages hypothesis) was proposed by Edward Vajda in 2008, and has met with some acceptance within the community of professional linguists. The validity of the rest of the family, however, is viewed as doubtful or rejected by nearly all historical linguists.[1][2][3][4][5]

History of the hypothesis edit

Classifications similar to Dené–Caucasian were put forward in the 20th century by Alfredo Trombetti, Edward Sapir, Robert Bleichsteiner, Karl Bouda, E. J. Furnée, René Lafon, Robert Shafer, Olivier Guy Tailleur, Morris Swadesh, Vladimir N. Toporov, and other scholars.

Morris Swadesh included all of the members of Dené–Caucasian in a family that he called "Basque-Dennean" (when writing in English, 2006/1971: 223) or "vascodene" (when writing in Spanish, 1959: 114). It was named for Basque and Navajo, the languages at its geographic extremes. According to Swadesh (1959: 114), it included "Basque, the Caucasian languages, Ural-Altaic, Dravidian, Tibeto-Burman, Chinese, Austronesian, Japanese, Chukchi (Siberia), Eskimo-Aleut, Wakash, and Na-Dene", and possibly "Sumerian".[6] Swadesh's Basque-Dennean thus differed from Dené–Caucasian in including (1) Uralic, Altaic, Japanese, Chukotian, and Eskimo-Aleut (languages which are classed as Eurasiatic by the followers of Sergei Starostin and those of Joseph Greenberg), (2) Dravidian, which is classed as Nostratic by Starostin's school, and (3) Austronesian (which according to Starostin is indeed related to Dené–Caucasian, but only at the next stage up, which he termed Dené–Daic, and only via Austric (see Starostin's Borean macrofamily)). Swadesh's colleague Mary Haas[citation needed] attributes the origin of the Basque-Dennean hypothesis to Edward Sapir.

In the 1980s, Sergei Starostin, using strict linguistic methods (proposing regular phonological correspondences, reconstructions, glottochronology, etc.), became the first[citation needed] to put the idea that the Caucasian, Yeniseian and Sino-Tibetan languages are related on firmer ground.[7][citation needed] In 1991, Sergei L. Nikolaev added the Na-Dené languages to Starostin's classification.[8]

The inclusion of the Na-Dené languages has been somewhat complicated by the ongoing dispute over whether Haida belongs to the family. The proponents of the Dené–Caucasian hypothesis incline towards supporters of Haida's membership in Na-Dené, such as Heinz-Jürgen Pinnow[9] or, most recently, John Enrico.[10] Edward J. Vajda, who otherwise rejects the Dené–Caucasian hypothesis, has suggested that Tlingit, Eyak, and the Athabaskan languages are closely related to the Yeniseian languages, but he denies any genetic relationship of the former three to Haida.[11] Vajda's ideas on the relationship of Athabaskan–Eyak–Tlingit and Yeniseian have found support independently in works of various authors, including Heinrich K. Werner[12] or Merritt Ruhlen.[13] DNA analyses have not shown any special connection between the modern Ket population and the modern speakers of the Na-Dené languages.[14]

In 1996, John D. Bengtson added the Vasconic languages (including Basque, its extinct relative or ancestor Aquitanian, and possibly Iberian), and in 1997 he proposed the inclusion of Burushaski. The same year, in his article for Mother Tongue, Bengtson concluded that Sumerian might have been a remnant of a distinct subgroup of the Dené–Caucasian languages.[15]

In 1998, Vitaly V. Shevoroshkin rejected the Amerind affinity of the Almosan (Algonquian-Wakashan) languages, suggesting instead that they had a relationship with Dené–Caucasian. Several years later, he offered a number of lexical and phonological correspondences between the North Caucasian, Salishan, and Wakashan languages, concluding that Salishan and Wakashan may represent a distinct branch of North Caucasian and that their separation from it must postdate the dissolution of the Northeast Caucasian unity (Avar-Andi-Tsezian), which took place around the 2nd or 3rd millennium BC.[16]

Academic concerns with Dené–Caucasian edit

  • The somewhat heavy reliance on the reconstruction of Proto-(North-)Caucasian by Starostin and Nikolayev.[17] This reconstruction contains much uncertainty due to the extreme complexity of the sound systems of the Caucasian languages; the sound correspondences between these languages are difficult to trace.
  • The use of the reconstruction of Proto-Sino-Tibetan by Peiros and Starostin,[18] parts of which have been criticized on various grounds,[19] although Starostin himself has proposed a few revisions.[17] All reconstructions of Proto-Sino-Tibetan suffer from the facts that many languages of the huge Sino-Tibetan family are underresearched and that the shape of the Sino-Tibetan tree is poorly known and partly controversial.
  • The use of Starostin's reconstruction of Proto-Yeniseian[citation needed] rather than the competing one by Vajda[citation needed] or that by Werner.[12]

Family tree proposals edit

Starostin's theory edit

The Dené–Caucasian family tree and approximate divergence dates (estimated by modified glottochronology) proposed by S. A. Starostin and his colleagues from the Tower of Babel project:[20]

1. Dené–Caucasian languages [8,700 BCE]
1.1. Na-Dené languages (Athabascan–Eyak–Tlingit)
1.2. Sino-Vasconic languages [7,900 BCE]
1.2.1. Vasconic (see below)
1.2.2. Sino-Caucasian languages [6,200 BCE]
1.2.2.1. Burushaski
1.2.2.2. Caucaso-Sino-Yeniseian [5,900 BCE]
1.2.2.2.1. North Caucasian languages
1.2.2.2.2. Sino-Yeniseian [5,100 BCE]
1.2.2.2.2.1. Yeniseian languages
1.2.2.2.2.2. Sino-Tibetan languages

Bengtson's theory edit

John D. Bengtson groups Basque, Caucasian and Burushaski together in a Macro-Caucasian (earlier Vasco-Caucasian) family (see the section on Macro-Caucasian below).[21] According to him, it is as yet premature to propose other nodes or subgroupings, but he notes that Sumerian seems to share the same number of isoglosses with the (geographically) western branches as with the eastern ones:[22]

1. Dené–Caucasian
1.1. The Macro-Caucasian family
1.1.1. Basque
1.1.2. North Caucasian
1.1.3. Burushaski
1.2. Sumerian
1.3. Sino-Tibetan
1.4. Yeniseian
1.5. Na-Dené

Proposed subbranches edit

Macro-Caucasian edit

John Bengtson (2008)[23] proposes that, within Dené–Caucasian, the Caucasian languages form a branch together with Basque and Burushaski, based on many shared word roots as well as shared grammar such as:

  • the Caucasian plural/collective ending *-/rV/ of nouns, which is preserved in many modern Caucasian languages, as well as sometimes fossilized in singular nouns with collective meaning; one of the many Burushaski plural endings for class I and II (masculine and feminine) nouns is -/aro/.
  • the consonant -/t/, which is inserted between the components of some Basque compound nouns and can be compared to the East Caucasian element -*/du/ which is inserted between the noun stem and the endings of cases other than the ergative.
  • the presence of compound case endings (agglutinated from the suffixes of two different cases) in all three branches.
  • case endings

Karasuk edit

George van Driem has proposed that the Yeniseian languages are the closest known relatives of Burushaski, based on a small number of similarities in grammar and lexicon. The Karasuk theory as proposed by van Driem does not address other language families that are hypothesized to belong to Dené–Caucasian,[24] so whether the Karasuk hypothesis is compatible or not with the Macro-Caucasian hypothesis remains to be investigated.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Sanchez-Mazas, Alicia; Blench, Roger; Ross, Malcolm D.; Peiros, Ilia; Lin, Marie (2008-07-25). Past Human Migrations in East Asia: Matching Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. Routledge. ISBN 9781134149629.
  2. ^ Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 286-288
  3. ^ Goddard, Ives (1996). "The Classification of the Native Languages of North America". In Ives Goddard, ed., "Languages". Vol. 17 of William Sturtevant, ed., Handbook of North American Indians. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. pg. 318
  4. ^ Trask, R. L. (2000). The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pg. 85
  5. ^ Dalby, Andrew (1998). Dictionary of Languages. New York: Columbia University Press. pg. 434
  6. ^ Swadesh, Mauricio (1987). Tras la huella lingüística de la prehistoria. ISBN 9789683603685.
  7. ^ See Starostin 1984, Starostin 1991
  8. ^ See Nikola(y)ev 1991
  9. ^ See Pinnow 1985a, Pinnow 1985b, Pinnow 1986a, Pinnow 1986b, Pinnow 1988, Pinnow 1990a, Pinnow 1990b
  10. ^ See Enrico 2004
  11. ^ See Vajda 2000a, Vajda 2000b, Vajda 2000c, Vajda 2000d, Vajda 2000e, Vajda 2001a, Vajda 2001b, Vajda 2002, Vajda 2004
  12. ^ a b See Werner 2004
  13. ^ See Ruhlen 1998c
  14. ^ See Rubicz et al. 2002
  15. ^ See Bengtson 1996, Bengtson 1997, Bengtson 1997
  16. ^ See Shevoroshkin 1998, Shevoroshkin 2003, and Shevoroshkin 2004
  17. ^ a b See Starostin 1994
  18. ^ See Peiros & Starostin 1996
  19. ^ See Handel 1998
  20. ^ See The preliminary phylogenetic tree according to the Tower of Babel Project
  21. ^ See Bengtson 1997a
  22. ^ See Bengtson 1997b
  23. ^ See Bengtson 2008
  24. ^ See Van Driem 2001

References edit

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  • WERNER, Heinrich K. (2004): Zur jenissejisch-indianischen Urverwandtschaft [On the Yeniseian-[American] Indian primordial relationship]. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz

Further reading edit

  • Nikolayev, Sergei. 2014. Possible Dene-Caucasian cognates. The 9th Annual Sergei Starostin Memorial Conference on Comparative Historical Linguistics. Moscow: RSUH.
  • Starostin, George. 2014. Basque / North Caucasian lexical matches on the 50-item wordlist. 9th Annual Readings in memory of S. Starostin. Moscow, RSUH, March 27-28, 2014.
  • Vajda, Edward. 2013. Assessing the Sino-Caucasian Hypothesis. Comparative-Historical Linguistics of the XXIst Century: Issues and Perspectives. Institute for Oriental and Classical Studies, Russian State University for the Humanities. Moscow, March 20-22, 2013.

External links edit

  • Moscow Lexical Database (MosLex) by Alexei Kassian, which compares basic vocabulary for Dené-Caucasian languages
  • Dené–Caucasian ethno-linguistic map
  • The Tower of Babel (site in English and Russian including Proposed family tree and Word-final resonants in Sino-Caucasian)
  • A Final (?) Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1 (GIF)

dené, caucasian, languages, this, article, present, fringe, theories, without, giving, appropriate, weight, mainstream, view, explaining, responses, fringe, theories, please, help, improve, discuss, issue, talk, page, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, tem. This article may present fringe theories without giving appropriate weight to the mainstream view and explaining the responses to the fringe theories Please help improve it or discuss the issue on the talk page June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dene Caucasian is a proposed language family that includes widely separated language groups spoken in the Northern Hemisphere Sino Tibetan languages Yeniseian languages Burushaski and North Caucasian languages in Asia Na Dene languages in North America and the Vasconic languages from Europe including Basque Dene Caucasian widely rejected Geographicdistributionscattered in Eurasia and North AmericaLinguistic classificationHypothetical language familyProto languageProto Dene CaucasianSubdivisionsNa Dene including Haida Yeniseian North Caucasian Sino Tibetan Burushaski Vasconic Tyrsenian sometimes included Sumerian sometimes included Almosan rarely included GlottologNoneA narrower connection specifically between North American Na Dene and Siberian Yeniseian the Dene Yeniseian languages hypothesis was proposed by Edward Vajda in 2008 and has met with some acceptance within the community of professional linguists The validity of the rest of the family however is viewed as doubtful or rejected by nearly all historical linguists 1 2 3 4 5 Contents 1 History of the hypothesis 2 Academic concerns with Dene Caucasian 3 Family tree proposals 3 1 Starostin s theory 3 2 Bengtson s theory 4 Proposed subbranches 4 1 Macro Caucasian 4 2 Karasuk 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory of the hypothesis editClassifications similar to Dene Caucasian were put forward in the 20th century by Alfredo Trombetti Edward Sapir Robert Bleichsteiner Karl Bouda E J Furnee Rene Lafon Robert Shafer Olivier Guy Tailleur Morris Swadesh Vladimir N Toporov and other scholars Morris Swadesh included all of the members of Dene Caucasian in a family that he called Basque Dennean when writing in English 2006 1971 223 or vascodene when writing in Spanish 1959 114 It was named for Basque and Navajo the languages at its geographic extremes According to Swadesh 1959 114 it included Basque the Caucasian languages Ural Altaic Dravidian Tibeto Burman Chinese Austronesian Japanese Chukchi Siberia Eskimo Aleut Wakash and Na Dene and possibly Sumerian 6 Swadesh s Basque Dennean thus differed from Dene Caucasian in including 1 Uralic Altaic Japanese Chukotian and Eskimo Aleut languages which are classed as Eurasiatic by the followers of Sergei Starostin and those of Joseph Greenberg 2 Dravidian which is classed as Nostratic by Starostin s school and 3 Austronesian which according to Starostin is indeed related to Dene Caucasian but only at the next stage up which he termed Dene Daic and only via Austric see Starostin s Borean macrofamily Swadesh s colleague Mary Haas citation needed attributes the origin of the Basque Dennean hypothesis to Edward Sapir In the 1980s Sergei Starostin using strict linguistic methods proposing regular phonological correspondences reconstructions glottochronology etc became the first citation needed to put the idea that the Caucasian Yeniseian and Sino Tibetan languages are related on firmer ground 7 citation needed In 1991 Sergei L Nikolaev added the Na Dene languages to Starostin s classification 8 The inclusion of the Na Dene languages has been somewhat complicated by the ongoing dispute over whether Haida belongs to the family The proponents of the Dene Caucasian hypothesis incline towards supporters of Haida s membership in Na Dene such as Heinz Jurgen Pinnow 9 or most recently John Enrico 10 Edward J Vajda who otherwise rejects the Dene Caucasian hypothesis has suggested that Tlingit Eyak and the Athabaskan languages are closely related to the Yeniseian languages but he denies any genetic relationship of the former three to Haida 11 Vajda s ideas on the relationship of Athabaskan Eyak Tlingit and Yeniseian have found support independently in works of various authors including Heinrich K Werner 12 or Merritt Ruhlen 13 DNA analyses have not shown any special connection between the modern Ket population and the modern speakers of the Na Dene languages 14 In 1996 John D Bengtson added the Vasconic languages including Basque its extinct relative or ancestor Aquitanian and possibly Iberian and in 1997 he proposed the inclusion of Burushaski The same year in his article for Mother Tongue Bengtson concluded that Sumerian might have been a remnant of a distinct subgroup of the Dene Caucasian languages 15 In 1998 Vitaly V Shevoroshkin rejected the Amerind affinity of the Almosan Algonquian Wakashan languages suggesting instead that they had a relationship with Dene Caucasian Several years later he offered a number of lexical and phonological correspondences between the North Caucasian Salishan and Wakashan languages concluding that Salishan and Wakashan may represent a distinct branch of North Caucasian and that their separation from it must postdate the dissolution of the Northeast Caucasian unity Avar Andi Tsezian which took place around the 2nd or 3rd millennium BC 16 Academic concerns with Dene Caucasian editMain articles Proto Dene Caucasian language and Proto Dene Caucasian roots The somewhat heavy reliance on the reconstruction of Proto North Caucasian by Starostin and Nikolayev 17 This reconstruction contains much uncertainty due to the extreme complexity of the sound systems of the Caucasian languages the sound correspondences between these languages are difficult to trace The use of the reconstruction of Proto Sino Tibetan by Peiros and Starostin 18 parts of which have been criticized on various grounds 19 although Starostin himself has proposed a few revisions 17 All reconstructions of Proto Sino Tibetan suffer from the facts that many languages of the huge Sino Tibetan family are underresearched and that the shape of the Sino Tibetan tree is poorly known and partly controversial The use of Starostin s reconstruction of Proto Yeniseian citation needed rather than the competing one by Vajda citation needed or that by Werner 12 Family tree proposals editStarostin s theory edit The Dene Caucasian family tree and approximate divergence dates estimated by modified glottochronology proposed by S A Starostin and his colleagues from the Tower of Babel project 20 1 Dene Caucasian languages 8 700 BCE 1 1 Na Dene languages Athabascan Eyak Tlingit 1 2 Sino Vasconic languages 7 900 BCE 1 2 1 Vasconic see below 1 2 2 Sino Caucasian languages 6 200 BCE 1 2 2 1 Burushaski 1 2 2 2 Caucaso Sino Yeniseian 5 900 BCE 1 2 2 2 1 North Caucasian languages 1 2 2 2 2 Sino Yeniseian 5 100 BCE 1 2 2 2 2 1 Yeniseian languages 1 2 2 2 2 2 Sino Tibetan languages dd dd dd dd dd Bengtson s theory edit John D Bengtson groups Basque Caucasian and Burushaski together in a Macro Caucasian earlier Vasco Caucasian family see the section on Macro Caucasian below 21 According to him it is as yet premature to propose other nodes or subgroupings but he notes that Sumerian seems to share the same number of isoglosses with the geographically western branches as with the eastern ones 22 1 Dene Caucasian1 1 The Macro Caucasian family1 1 1 Basque 1 1 2 North Caucasian 1 1 3 Burushaski dd 1 2 Sumerian 1 3 Sino Tibetan 1 4 Yeniseian 1 5 Na Dene dd Proposed subbranches editMacro Caucasian edit John Bengtson 2008 23 proposes that within Dene Caucasian the Caucasian languages form a branch together with Basque and Burushaski based on many shared word roots as well as shared grammar such as the Caucasian plural collective ending rV of nouns which is preserved in many modern Caucasian languages as well as sometimes fossilized in singular nouns with collective meaning one of the many Burushaski plural endings for class I and II masculine and feminine nouns is aro the consonant t which is inserted between the components of some Basque compound nouns and can be compared to the East Caucasian element du which is inserted between the noun stem and the endings of cases other than the ergative the presence of compound case endings agglutinated from the suffixes of two different cases in all three branches case endingsKarasuk edit Main article Karasuk languages George van Driem has proposed that the Yeniseian languages are the closest known relatives of Burushaski based on a small number of similarities in grammar and lexicon The Karasuk theory as proposed by van Driem does not address other language families that are hypothesized to belong to Dene Caucasian 24 so whether the Karasuk hypothesis is compatible or not with the Macro Caucasian hypothesis remains to be investigated See also editDene Yeniseian languages Language families and languages Proto language Borean languages Haplogroup C M217 Y DNA Sino UralicFootnotes edit Sanchez Mazas Alicia Blench Roger Ross Malcolm D Peiros Ilia Lin Marie 2008 07 25 Past Human Migrations in East Asia Matching Archaeology Linguistics and Genetics Routledge ISBN 9781134149629 Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian Languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America Oxford Oxford University Press pp 286 288 Goddard Ives 1996 The Classification of the Native Languages of North America In Ives Goddard ed Languages Vol 17 of William Sturtevant ed Handbook of North American Indians Washington D C Smithsonian Institution pg 318 Trask R L 2000 The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pg 85 Dalby Andrew 1998 Dictionary of Languages New York Columbia University Press pg 434 Swadesh Mauricio 1987 Tras la huella linguistica de la prehistoria ISBN 9789683603685 See Starostin 1984 Starostin 1991 See Nikola y ev 1991 See Pinnow 1985a Pinnow 1985b Pinnow 1986a Pinnow 1986b Pinnow 1988 Pinnow 1990a Pinnow 1990b See Enrico 2004 See Vajda 2000a Vajda 2000b Vajda 2000c Vajda 2000d Vajda 2000e Vajda 2001a Vajda 2001b Vajda 2002 Vajda 2004 a b See Werner 2004 See Ruhlen 1998c See Rubicz et al 2002 See Bengtson 1996 Bengtson 1997 Bengtson 1997 See Shevoroshkin 1998 Shevoroshkin 2003 and Shevoroshkin 2004 a b See Starostin 1994 See Peiros amp Starostin 1996 See Handel 1998 See The preliminary phylogenetic tree according to the Tower of Babel Project See Bengtson 1997a See Bengtson 1997b See Bengtson 2008 See Van Driem 2001References editBENEDICT Paul K 1972 Sino Tibetan A Conspectus 103ff Ed by J A Matisoff Cambridge University Press BENGTSON John D 2008 Materials for a Comparative Grammar of the Dene Caucasian Sino Caucasian Languages PDF Aspects of Comparative Linguistics vol 3 Moscow RSUH Publishers pp 45 118 BENGTSON John D 2004 Some features of Dene Caucasian phonology with special reference to Basque In Cahiers de l Institut de Linguistique de Louvain CILL 33 54 BENGTSON John D 2003 Notes on Basque Comparative Phonology Mother Tongue 8 21 39 BENGTSON John D 2002 The Dene Caucasian noun prefix s In The Linguist s Linguist A Collection of Papers in Honour of Alexis Manaster Ramer ed by F Cavoto pp 53 57 Munich LINCOM Europa BENGTSON John D 1999a Review of R L Trask The History of Basque In Romance Philology 52 Spring 219 224 BENGTSON John D 1999b Wider genetic affiliations of the Chinese language Journal of Chinese Linguistics 27 1 1 12 BENGTSON John D 1994 Edward Sapir and the Sino Dene Hypothesis Anthropological Science Tokyo 102 207 230 BENGTSON John D 1998 Caucasian and Sino Tibetan A Hypothesis of S A Starostin General Linguistics Vol 36 no 1 2 1998 1996 Pegasus Press University of North Carolina Asheville North Carolina BENGTSON John D 1997a Ein Vergleich von Buruschaski und Nordkaukasisch A comparison of B and North Caucasian Georgica 20 88 94 BENGTSON John D 1997b The riddle of Sumerian A Dene Caucasic language Mother Tongue 3 63 74 BENGTSON John D 1996 A Final Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1 see External links below BERGER Hermann 1998 Die Burushaski Sprache von Hunza und Nager 3 volumes Wiesbaden Harrassowitz BERGER Hermann 1974 Das Yasin Burushaski Werchikwar Wiesbaden Harrassowitz BOMHARD Allan R 1997 On the origin of Sumerian Mother Tongue 3 75 93 CATFORD J C 1977 Mountain of Tongues The languages of the Caucasus Annual Review of Anthropology 6 283 314 DIAKONOFF Igor M 1997 External Connections of the Sumerian Language Mother Tongue 3 54 63 ENRICO John 2004 Toward Proto Na Dene Anthropological Linguistics 46 3 229 302 HANDEL Zev Joseph 1998 The Medial Systems of Old Chinese and Proto Sino Tibetan PhD thesis University of California at Berkeley Archived from the original on 2008 03 05 Retrieved 2008 01 28 KOROTAYEV Andrey and KAZANKOV Alexander 2000 Regions Based on Social Structure A Reconsideration Current Anthropology 41 5 October 2000 668 69 CHIRIKBA Vyacheslav A 1985 Baskskij i severokavkazskie yazyki Basque and the North Caucasian languages In Drevnyaya Anatoliya Ancient Anatolia pp 95 105 Moscow Nauka NIKOLA Y EV Sergei L 1991 Sino Caucasian Languages in America In Shevoroshkin 1991 pp 42 66 PEIROS Ilia and STAROSTIN Sergei A 1996 A comparative vocabulary of five Sino Tibetan languages University of Melbourne Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1990a Die Na Dene Sprachen im Lichte der Greenberg Klassifikation The Na Dene languages in the light of the Greenberg classification Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Heft 64 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1990b in two parts Vogelnamen des Tlingit und Haida Materialien zu ihrer sprachhistorischen Erforschung sowie Auflistung der Vogelarten von Alaska Bird names of Tlingit and Haida Materials to their language historical investigation and list of the bird species of Alaska Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Hefte 67 68 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1988 Verwandtschafts und andere Personenbezeichnungen im Tlingit und Haida Versuch ihrer sprachhistorischen Deutung Kinship and other person terms in Tlingit and Haida attempt at their language historical interpretation Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Heft 62 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1986a Die Zahlworter des Haida in sprachvergleichender Sicht The numerals of Haida in comparative view Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Heft 47 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1986b Saugetiernamen des Haida und Tlingit Materialien zu ihrer historischen Erforschung Mammal names of Haida and Tlingit materials to their historical investigation Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Heft 50 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1985a Sprachhistorische Untersuchung einiger Tiernamen im Haida Fische Stachelhauter Weichtiere Gliederfusser u a Language historical investigation of some animal names in Haida fish echinoderms mollusks arthropods and others Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Heft 39 PINNOW Heinz Jurgen 1985b in four parts Das Haida als Na Dene Sprache Haida as a Na Dene language Nortorf Volkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Abhandlungen Hefte 43 46 RUBICZ R MELVIN K L CRAWFORD M H 2002 Genetic Evidence for the phylogenetic relationship between Na Dene and Yeniseian speakers Human Biology Dec 1 2002 74 6 743 761 RUHLEN Merritt 2001a Il Dene caucasico una nuova famiglia linguistica Pluriverso 2 76 85 RUHLEN Merritt 2001b Taxonomic Controversies in the Twentieth Century in New Essays on the Origin of Language ed by Jurgen Trabant and Sean Ward Berlin Mouton de Gruyter 197 214 RUHLEN Merritt 1998a Dene Caucasian A New Linguistic Family in The Origins and Past of Modern Humans Towards Reconciliation ed by Keiichi Omoto and Phillip V Tobias Singapore World Scientific 231 46 RUHLEN Merritt 1998b The Origin of the Na Dene Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U S A 95 13994 13996 RUHLEN Merritt 1998c The Origin of the Na Dene Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 95 13994 96 RUHLEN Merritt 1997 Une nouvelle famille de langues le dene caucasien Pour la Science Dossier October 68 73 SCHMIDT Karl Horst 1994 Class Inflection and Related Categories in the Caucasus In Non Slavic Languages of the USSR ed by H I Aronson pp 185 192 Columbus OH Slavica SCHULZE FURHOFF Wolfgang 1992 How Can Class Markers Petrify Towards a Functional Diachrony of Morphological Subsystems in the East Caucasian Languages In The Non Slavic Languages of the USSR Linguistic Studies Second Series ed by H I Aronson pp 183 233 Chicago Chicago Linguistic Society SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaliy V 2004 Proto Salishan and Proto North Caucasian Consonants a few cognate sets in Nostratic Centennial Conference the Pecs Papers ed by I Hegedus amp P Sidwell pp 181 191 Pecs Lingua Franca Group SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaliy V 2003 Salishan and North Caucasian Mother Tongue 8 39 64 STAROSTIN Sergei A and Orel V 1989 Etruscan and North Caucasian Explorations in Language Macrofamilies Ed V Shevoroshkin Bochum Publications in Evolutionary Cultural Semiotics 23 Bochum SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaliy V 1999 Nostratic and Sino Caucasian two ancient language phyla In From Neanderthal to Easter Island Festschrift W W Schuhmacher ed by N A Kirk amp P J Sidwell pp 44 74 Melbourne SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaly V Fall 1998 1998 Symposium on Nostratic at Cambridge Mother Tongue The Association for the Study of Language In Prehistory 31 28 32 retrieved 2008 01 28 SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaliy V 1991 Ed Dene Sino Caucasian Languages Bochum Brockmeyer STAROSTIN Sergei A 2004 2005 Sino Caucasian comparative phonology amp Sino Caucasian comparative glossary STAROSTIN Sergei A 2002 A response to Alexander Vovin s criticism of the Sino Caucasian theory Journal of Chinese Linguistics 30 1 142 153 STAROSTIN Sergei A 2000 Genesis of the Long Vowels in Sino Tibetan In Problemy izucheniya dalnego rodstva yazykov na rybezhe tretego tysyacheletiya Doklady i tezisy mezhdunarodnoj konferencii RGGU Problems of the research on the distant origin of languages at the beginning of the third millennium Talks and abstracts of the international conference of the RGGU Moscow 2000 STAROSTIN Sergei A 1996 Word final resonants in Sino Caucasian Journal of Chinese Linguistics 24 2 281 311 written for the 3rd International Conference on Chinese Linguistics in Hongkong in 1994 STAROSTIN Sergei A 1995 Old Chinese Basic Vocabulary A Historical Perspective In The Ancestry of the Chinese Language Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph No 8 ed by W S Y Wang pp 225 251 Berkeley CA STAROSTIN Sergei A 1994 Preface PDF in Sergei A Starostin Nikola y ev Sergei L eds A North Caucasian Etymological Dictionary Moscow Asterisk Publishers pp 7 199 STAROSTIN Sergei A 1991 On the Hypothesis of a Genetic Connection Between the Sino Tibetan Languages and the Yeniseian and North Caucasian Languages in SHEVOROSHKIN Vitaliy V ed Dene Sino Caucasian languages materials from the First International Interdisciplinary Symposium on Language and Prehistory Ann Harbor Bochum Brockmeyer pp 12 41 Translation of Starostin 1984 STAROSTIN Sergei A 1984 Gipoteza o geneticheskih svyazyah sinotibetskih yazykov s enisejskimi i severokavkazskimi yazykami A hypothesis on the genetic relationships of the Sino Tibetan languages with the Yeniseian and the North Caucasian languages in Vardu I F ed Lingvisticheskaya rekonstrukciya i drevnejshaya istoriya Vostoka Linguistic reconstruction and the ancient history of the East Moscow Akademiya nauk Institut vostokovedeniya Institute of Orientalistics of the USSR Academy of Sciences pp 19 38 See Starostin 1991 for English translation The preliminary phylogenetic tree PNG The Tower of Babel Evolution of Human Language Project 2006 05 28 retrieved 2008 01 28 TRASK R L 1999 Why should a language have any relatives Pages 157 176 in C Renfrew amp D Nettle eds Nostratic Examining a Linguistic Macrofamily McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research Cambridge UK TRASK R L 1997 Basque and the Superfamilies The History of Basque Routledge London See especially pages 403 408 TRASK R L 1995 Basque and Dene Caucasian A Critique from the Basque Side Mother Tongue 1 3 82 TRASK R L 1994 1995 Basque The Search for Relatives Part 1 Dhumbadji 2 3 54 VAJDA Edward J 2004 Ket Languages of the World Materials 204 Munchen LINCOM Europa VAJDA Edward J 2002 The origin of phonemic tone in Yeniseic CLS 37 Parasession on Arctic languages 305 320 VAJDA Edward J 2001a Toward a typology of position class comparing Navajo and Ket verb morphology Read at SSILA Summer Meeting July 7 2001 VAJDA Edward J 2001b Linguistic relations across Bering Strait Siberia and the Native Americans Read at Bureau of Faculty Research Western Washington University Bellingham WA March 8 2001 VAJDA Edward J 2000 Evidence for a genetic connection between Na Dene and Yeniseian Central Siberia Paper read at January 2000 meeting of Society for the Study of Indigenous Languages of America SSILA and Linguistic Society of America LSA VAJDA Edward J 2000a Yeniseian and Na Dene evidence for a genetic relationship Paper read at 38th Conference on American Indian Languages SSILA Chicago Jan 2000 VAJDA Edward J 2000b Yeniseian and Athabaskan Eyak Tlingit Paper read at Linguistics Department Colloquium University of British Columbia Mar 2000 VAJDA Edward J 2000c Ket verb morphology and its parallels with Athabaskan Eyak Tlingit evidence of a genetic link Paper read at Athabaskan Language Conference Moricetown BC June 9 2000 VAJDA Edward J 2000d Athabaskan Eyak Tlingit and Yeniseian lexical and phonological parallels Read at 39th Conference on American Indian Languages San Francisco Nov 14 18 2000 VAN DRIEM George 2001 The Languages of the Himalayas Brill Leiden VOVIN Alexander 2002 Building a bum pa for Sino Caucasian Journal of Chinese Linguistics 30 1 154 171 VOVIN Alexander 1997 The Comparative Method and Ventures Beyond Sino Tibetan Journal of Chinese Linguistics 25 2 308 336 WERNER Heinrich K 2004 Zur jenissejisch indianischen Urverwandtschaft On the Yeniseian American Indian primordial relationship Wiesbaden HarrassowitzFurther reading editNikolayev Sergei 2014 Possible Dene Caucasian cognates The 9th Annual Sergei Starostin Memorial Conference on Comparative Historical Linguistics Moscow RSUH Starostin George 2014 Basque North Caucasian lexical matches on the 50 item wordlist 9th Annual Readings in memory of S Starostin Moscow RSUH March 27 28 2014 Vajda Edward 2013 Assessing the Sino Caucasian Hypothesis Comparative Historical Linguistics of the XXIst Century Issues and Perspectives Institute for Oriental and Classical Studies Russian State University for the Humanities Moscow March 20 22 2013 External links editMoscow Lexical Database MosLex by Alexei Kassian which compares basic vocabulary for Dene Caucasian languages Dene Caucasian ethno linguistic map The Tower of Babel site in English and Russian including Proposed family tree and Word final resonants in Sino Caucasian A Final Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1 GIF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dene Caucasian languages amp oldid 1175601023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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