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Tocharian languages

The Tocharian (sometimes Tokharian) languages (/təˈkɛəriən/ or /təˈkɑːriən/), also known as Arśi-Kuči, Agnean-Kuchean or Kuchean-Agnean, are an extinct branch of the Indo-European language family spoken by inhabitants of the Tarim Basin, the Tocharians.[3] The languages are known from manuscripts dating from the 5th to the 8th century AD, which were found in oasis cities on the northern edge of the Tarim Basin (now part of Xinjiang in Northwest China) and the Lop Desert. The discovery of these languages in the early 20th century contradicted the formerly prevalent idea of an east–west division of the Indo-European language family as centum and satem languages, and prompted reinvigorated study of the Indo-European family. Scholars studying these manuscripts in the early 20th century identified their authors with the Tokharoi, a name used in ancient sources for people of Bactria (Tokharistan). Although this identification is now believed to be mistaken, "Tocharian" remains the usual term for these languages.[4][3]

Tocharian
EthnicityTocharians
Geographic
distribution
Tarim Basin
Extinct9th century AD
Linguistic classificationIndo-European
  • Tocharian
Proto-languageProto-Tocharian
Subdivisions
  • Turfanian (Tocharian A)[1]
  • Kuchean (Tocharian B)
  • Kroränian (Tocharian C)[2]
Glottologtokh1241
  directly attested (Tocharian A and B)
  loanword traces (Tocharian C)

The discovered manuscripts record two closely related languages, called Tocharian A (also East Tocharian or Turfanian) and Tocharian B (West Tocharian or Kuchean).[5][6] The subject matter of the texts suggests that Tocharian A was more archaic and used as a Buddhist liturgical language, while Tocharian B was more actively spoken in the entire area from Turfan in the east to Tumshuq in the west. A body of loanwords and names found in Prakrit documents from the Lop Nor basin have been dubbed Tocharian C (Kroränian). A claimed find of ten Tocharian C texts written in Kharoṣṭhī script has been discredited.[7]

The oldest extant manuscripts in Tocharian B are now dated to the 5th or even late 4th century AD, making it a language of Late Antiquity contemporary with Gothic, Classical Armenian, and Primitive Irish.[8]

Discovery and significance

 
 
Indo-European migrations, with location of the Afanasievo culture (genetically identical to the Yamnaya culture of the Pontic steppes) and their probable Tocharians descendants[9]

The existence of the Tocharian languages and alphabet was not even suspected until archaeological exploration of the Tarim Basin by Aurel Stein in the early 20th century brought to light fragments of manuscripts in an unknown language, dating from the 6th to 8th centuries AD.[10]

It soon became clear that these fragments were actually written in two distinct but related languages belonging to a hitherto unknown branch of Indo-European, now known as Tocharian:

  • Tocharian A (Turfinian, Agnean, or East Tocharian; natively ārśi) of Qarašähär (ancient Agni, Chinese Yanqi and Sanskrit Agni) and Turpan (ancient Turfan and Xočo), and
  • Tocharian B (Kuchean or West Tocharian) of Kucha and Tocharian A sites.
 
The geographical spread of Indo-European languages

Prakrit documents from 3rd-century Krorän and Niya on the southeast edge of the Tarim Basin contain loanwords and names that appear to come from a closely related language, referred to as Tocharian C.[2]

The discovery of Tocharian upset some theories about the relations of Indo-European languages and revitalized their study. In the 19th century, it was thought that the division between centum and satem languages was a simple west–east division, with centum languages in the west. The theory was undermined in the early 20th century by the discovery of Hittite, a centum language in a relatively eastern location, and Tocharian, which was a centum language despite being the easternmost branch. The result was a new hypothesis, following the wave model of Johannes Schmidt, suggesting that the satem isogloss represents a linguistic innovation in the central part of the Proto-Indo-European home range, and the centum languages along the eastern and the western peripheries did not undergo that change.[11]

Several scholars identify the ancestors of the Tocharians with the Afanasievo culture of South Siberia (c. 3300–2500 BC), an early eastern offshoot of the steppe cultures of the Don-Volga area that later became the Yamnayans.[12][13][14] Under this scenario, Tocharian-speakers would have immigrated to the Tarim Basin from the north at some later point. On this basis, Michaël Peyrot argues that several of the most striking typological peculiarities of Tocharian are rooted in a prolonged contact of Proto-Tocharian with an early stage of Proto-Samoyedic in South Siberia. Among others, this might explain the merger of all three stop series (e.g. *t, *d, *dʰ > *t), which must have led to a huge number of homonyms, as well as the development of an agglutinative case system.[15]

Most scholars reject Walter Bruno Henning's proposed link to Gutian, a language spoken on the Iranian plateau in the 22nd century BC and known only from personal names.[16]

Tocharian probably died out after 840 when the Uyghurs, expelled from Mongolia by the Kyrgyz, moved into the Tarim Basin.[2] The theory is supported by the discovery of translations of Tocharian texts into Uyghur.

Some modern Chinese words may ultimately derive from a Tocharian or related source, e.g. Old Chinese *mjit (; ) "honey", from Proto-Tocharian *ḿət(ə) (where *ḿ is palatalized; cf. Tocharian B mit), cognate with Old Church Slavonic медъ (transliterated: medŭ) (meaning "honey"), and English mead.[17]

Names

 
Tocharian royal family (King, Queen and young blond-haired Prince), Kizil, Cave 17 (entrance wall, lower left panel). Hermitage Museum.[18][19][20][21]

A colophon to a Buddhist manuscript in Old Turkic from 800 AD states that it was translated from Sanskrit via a twγry language. In 1907 Emil Sieg and Friedrich W. K. Müller guessed that this referred to the newly discovered language of the Turpan area.[22] Sieg and Müller, reading this name as toxrï, connected it with the ethnonym Tócharoi (Ancient Greek: Τόχαροι, Ptolemy VI, 11, 6, 2nd century AD), itself taken from Indo-Iranian (cf. Old Persian tuxāri-, Khotanese ttahvāra, and Sanskrit tukhāra), and proposed the name "Tocharian" (German Tocharisch). Ptolemy's Tócharoi are often associated by modern scholars with the Yuezhi of Chinese historical accounts, who founded the Kushan empire.[23][24] It is now clear that these people actually spoke Bactrian, an Eastern Iranian language, rather than the language of the Tarim manuscripts, so the term "Tocharian" is considered a misnomer.[25][26][27]

Nevertheless, it remains the standard term for the language of the Tarim Basin manuscripts.[28][29]

In 1938, Walter Bruno Henning found the term "four twγry" used in early 9th-century manuscripts in Sogdian, Middle Iranian, and Uighur. He argued that it referred to the region on the northeast edge of the Tarim, including Agni and Karakhoja, but not Kucha. He thus inferred that the colophon referred to the Agnean language.[30][31]

Although the term twγry or toxrï appears to be the Old Turkic name for the Tocharians, it is not found in Tocharian texts.[28] The apparent self-designation ārśi appears in Tocharian A texts. Tocharian B texts use the adjective kuśiññe, derived from kuśi or kuči, a name also known from Chinese and Turkic documents.[28] The historian Bernard Sergent compounded these names to coin an alternative term Arśi-Kuči for the family, recently revised to Agni-Kuči,[32] but this name has not achieved widespread usage.

Writing system

 
Tocharian B inscription from the Kizil Caves, in the Tocharian version of the Brahmi script, reading:
𑀲𑁂𑀧𑀜𑀓𑁆𑀢𑁂 𑀲𑀡𑁆𑀓𑁂𑀢𑀯𑀝𑁆𑀲𑁂 𑀱𑀭𑁆𑀲 𑀧𑀧𑁃𑀬𑁆𑀓𑁅
(Traditional Ashokan Brahmi)
Se pañäkte saṅketavattse ṣarsa papaiykau
"This Buddha, by Sanketava's hand, was painted".[33][34][35][36]

Tocharian is documented in manuscript fragments, mostly from the 8th century (with a few earlier ones) that were written on palm leaves, wooden tablets, and Chinese paper, preserved by the extremely dry climate of the Tarim Basin. Samples of the language have been discovered at sites in Kucha and Karasahr, including many mural inscriptions.

Most of attested Tocharian was written in the Tocharian alphabet, a derivative of the Brahmi alphabetic syllabary (abugida) also referred to as North Turkestan Brahmi or slanting Brahmi. However a smaller amount was written in the Manichaean script in which Manichaean texts were recorded.[37][38] It soon became apparent that a large proportion of the manuscripts were translations of known Buddhist works in Sanskrit and some of them were even bilingual, facilitating decipherment of the new language. Besides the Buddhist and Manichaean religious texts, there were also monastery correspondence and accounts, commercial documents, caravan permits, medical and magical texts, and one love poem.

In 1998 the Chinese linguist Ji Xianlin published a translation and analysis of fragments of a Tocharian Maitreyasamiti-Nataka discovered in 1974 in Yanqi.[39][40][41]

Tocharian A and B

 
Tocharian languages A (blue), B (red) and C (green) in the Tarim Basin.[42] Tarim oasis towns are given as listed in the Book of Han (c. 2nd century BC), with the areas of the squares proportional to population.[43]

Tocharian A and B are significantly different, to the point of being mutually unintelligible. A common Proto-Tocharian language must precede the attested languages by several centuries, probably dating to the late 1st millennium BC.[44]

Tocharian A is found only in the eastern part of the Tocharian-speaking area, and all extant texts are of a religious nature. Tocharian B, however, is found throughout the range and in both religious and secular texts. As a result, it has been suggested that Tocharian A was a liturgical language, no longer spoken natively, while Tocharian B was the spoken language of the entire area.[2]

The hypothesized relationship of Tocharian A and B as liturgical and spoken forms, respectively, is sometimes compared with the relationship between Latin and the modern Romance languages, or Classical Chinese and Mandarin. However, in both of these latter cases, the liturgical language is the linguistic ancestor of the spoken language, whereas no such relationship holds between Tocharian A and B. In fact, from a phonological perspective Tocharian B is significantly more conservative than Tocharian A, and serves as the primary source for reconstructing Proto-Tocharian. Only Tocharian B preserves the following Proto-Tocharian features: stress distinctions, final vowels, diphthongs, and o vs. e distinction. In turn, the loss of final vowels in Tocharian A has led to the loss of certain Proto-Tocharian categories still found in Tocharian B, e.g. the vocative case and some of the noun, verb, and adjective declensional classes.

In their declensional and conjugational endings, the two languages innovated in divergent ways, with neither clearly simpler than the other. For example, both languages show significant innovations in the present active indicative endings but in radically different ways, so that only the second-person singular ending is directly cognate between the two languages, and in most cases neither variant is directly cognate with the corresponding Proto-Indo-European (PIE) form. The agglutinative secondary case endings in the two languages likewise stem from different sources, showing parallel development of the secondary case system after the Proto-Tocharian period. Likewise, some of the verb classes show independent origins, e.g. the class II preterite, which uses reduplication in Tocharian A (possibly from the reduplicated aorist) but long PIE ē in Tocharian B (possibly related to the long-vowel perfect found in Latin lēgī, fēcī, etc.).[28]

Tocharian B shows an internal chronological development; three linguistic stages have been detected.[45] The oldest stage is attested only in Kucha. There are also the middle ("classical") and the late stage.[46]

Tocharian C

A third Tocharian language was first suggested by Thomas Burrow in the 1930s, while discussing 3rd-century documents from Krörän (Loulan) and Niya. The texts were written in Gandhari Prakrit, but contained loanwords of evidently Tocharian origin, such as kilme ("district"), ṣoṣthaṃga ("tax collector"), and ṣilpoga ("document"). This hypothetical language later became generally known as Tocharian C; it has also sometimes been called Kroränian or Krorainic.[47]

In papers published posthumously in 2018, Klaus T. Schmidt, a scholar of Tocharian, presented a decipherment of 10 texts written in the Kharoṣṭhī script. Schmidt claimed that these texts were written in a third Tocharian language he called Lolanisch.[48][49] He also suggested that the language was closer to Tocharian B than to Tocharian A.[49] In 2019 a group of linguists led by Georges Pinault and Michaël Peyrot convened in Leiden to examine Schmidt's translations against the original texts. They concluded that Schmidt's decipherment was fundamentally flawed, that there was no reason to associate the texts with Krörän, and that the language they recorded was neither Tocharian nor Indic, but Iranian.[7][50]

Phonology

 
 
Left: So-called "Tocharian donors" fresco, Qizil, Tarim Basin. These frescoes are associated with annotations in Tocharian and Sanskrit made by their painters. They were carbon dated to 432–538 AD.[51][52] The style of the swordsmen is now considered to belong to the Hephthalites, from Tokharistan, who occupied the Tarim Basin from 480 to 560 AD, but spoke Bactrian, an Eastern Iranian language.[53][54]
Right: One of the painters, with a label in Tocharian: Citrakara Tutukasya "The Painter Tutuka". Cave of the Painters, Kizil Caves, circa 500 AD.[55][56][57]

Phonetically, Tocharian languages are "centum" Indo-European languages, meaning that they merge the palatovelar consonants (*ḱ, *ǵ, *ǵʰ) of Proto-Indo-European with the plain velars (*k, *g, *gʰ) rather than palatalizing them to affricates or sibilants. Centum languages are mostly found in western and southern Europe (Greek, Italic, Celtic, Germanic). In that sense Tocharian (to some extent like the Greek and the Anatolian languages) seems to have been an isolate in the "satem" (i.e. palatovelar to sibilant) phonetic regions of Indo-European-speaking populations. The discovery of Tocharian contributed to doubts that Proto-Indo-European had originally split into western and eastern branches; today, the centum–satem division is not seen as a real familial division.[58][59]

Vowels

  Front Central Back
Close i /i/ ä /ɨ/ u /u/
Mid e /e/ a /ə/ o /o/
Open   ā /a/  

Tocharian A and Tocharian B have the same set of vowels, but they often do not correspond to each other. For example, the sound a did not occur in Proto-Tocharian. Tocharian B a is derived from former stressed ä or unstressed ā (reflected unchanged in Tocharian A), while Tocharian A a stems from Proto-Tocharian /ɛ/ or /ɔ/ (reflected as /e/ and /o/ in Tocharian B), and Tocharian A e and o stem largely from monophthongization of former diphthongs (still present in Tocharian B).

Diphthongs

Diphthongs occur in Tocharian B only.

  Closer component
is front
Closer component
is back
Opener component is unrounded ai /əi/ au /əu/
āu /au/
Opener component is rounded oy /oi/  

Consonants

 
Wooden tablet with an inscription showing Tocharian B in its Brahmic form. Kucha, Xinjiang, 5th–8th century (Tokyo National Museum)

The following table lists the reconstructed phonemes in Tocharian along with their standard transcription. Because Tocharian is written in an alphabet used originally for Sanskrit and its descendants, the transcription reflects Sanskrit phonology, and may not represent Tocharian phonology accurately. The Tocharian alphabet also has letters representing all of the remaining Sanskrit sounds, but these appear only in Sanskrit loanwords and are not thought to have had distinct pronunciations in Tocharian. There is some uncertainty as to actual pronunciation of some of the letters, particularly those representing palatalized obstruents (see below).

  Bilabial Alveolar Alveolo-palatal Palatal Velar
Plosive p /p/ t /t/   k /k/
Affricate   ts /ts/ c /tɕ/?2    
Fricative   s /s/ ś /ɕ/   /ʃ/?3  
Nasal m /m/ n /n/1   ñ /ɲ/ /ŋ/4
Trill   r /r/      
Approximant       y /j/  w /w/
Lateral approximant   l /l/   ly /ʎ/  
  1. /n/ is transcribed by two different letters in the Tocharian alphabet depending on position. Based on the corresponding letters in Sanskrit, these are transcribed (word-finally, including before certain clitics) and n (elsewhere), but represents /n/, not /m/.
  2. The sound written c is thought to correspond to a alveolo-palatal affricate // in Sanskrit. The Tocharian pronunciation /tɕ/ is suggested by the common occurrence of the cluster śc, but the exact pronunciation cannot be determined with certainty.
  3. The sound written seems more likely to have been a palato-alveolar sibilant /ʃ/ (as in English "ship"), because it derives from a palatalized /s/.[60]
  4. The sound /ŋ/ occurs only before k, or in some clusters where a k has been deleted between consonants. It is clearly phonemic because sequences nk and ñk also exist (from syncope of a former ä between them).

Morphology

Nouns

Tocharian has completely re-worked the nominal declension system of Proto-Indo-European.[61] The only cases inherited from the proto-language are nominative, genitive, accusative, and (in Tocharian B only) vocative; in Tocharian the old accusative is known as the oblique case. In addition to these primary cases, however, each Tocharian language has six cases formed by the addition of an invariant suffix to the oblique case — although the set of six cases is not the same in each language, and the suffixes are largely non-cognate. For example, the Tocharian word yakwe (Toch B), yuk (Toch A) "horse" < PIE *eḱwos is declined as follows:[28]

Case Tocharian B Tocharian A
Suffix Singular Plural Suffix Singular Plural
Nominative yakwe yakwi yuk yukañ
Vocative yakwa
Genitive yäkwentse yäkweṃtsi yukes yukāśśi
Oblique yakwe yakweṃ yuk yukas
Instrumental -yo yukyo yukasyo
Perlative -sa yakwesa yakwentsa yukā yukasā
Comitative -mpa yakwempa yakweṃmpa -aśśäl yukaśśäl yukasaśśäl
Allative -ś(c) yakweś(c) yakweṃś(c) -ac yukac yukasac
Ablative -meṃ yakwemeṃ yakweṃmeṃ -äṣ yukäṣ yukasäṣ
Locative -ne yakwene yakweṃne -aṃ yukaṃ yukasaṃ
Causative yakweñ yakweṃñ

The Tocharian A instrumental case rarely occurs with humans.

When referring to humans, the oblique singular of most adjectives and of some nouns is marked in both varieties by an ending -(a)ṃ, which also appears in the secondary cases. An example is eṅkwe (Toch B), oṅk (Toch A) "man", which belongs to the same declension as above, but has oblique singular eṅkweṃ (Toch B), oṅkaṃ (Toch A), and corresponding oblique stems eṅkweṃ- (Toch B), oṅkn- (Toch A) for the secondary cases. This is thought to stem from the generalization of n-stem adjectives as an indication of determinative semantics, seen most prominently in the weak adjective declension in the Germanic languages (where it cooccurs with definite articles and determiners), but also in Latin and Greek n-stem nouns (especially proper names) formed from adjectives, e.g. Latin Catō (genitive Catōnis) literally "the sly one" < catus "sly",[62][63] Greek Plátōn literally "the broad-shouldered one" < platús "broad".[28]

Verbs

 
Ambassador from Kucha (龜茲國 Qiuci-guo) at the Chinese Tang dynasty court. Wanghuitu (王会图), circa 650 AD

In contrast, the verbal conjugation system is quite conservative.[64] The majority of Proto-Indo-European verbal classes and categories are represented in some manner in Tocharian, although not necessarily with the same function.[65] Some examples: athematic and thematic present tenses, including null-, -y-, -sḱ-, -s-, -n- and -nH- suffixes as well as n-infixes and various laryngeal-ending stems; o-grade and possibly lengthened-grade perfects (although lacking reduplication or augment); sigmatic, reduplicated, thematic, and possibly lengthened-grade aorists; optatives; imperatives; and possibly PIE subjunctives.

In addition, most PIE sets of endings are found in some form in Tocharian (although with significant innovations), including thematic and athematic endings, primary (non-past) and secondary (past) endings, active and mediopassive endings, and perfect endings. Dual endings are still found, although they are rarely attested and generally restricted to the third person. The mediopassive still reflects the distinction between primary -r and secondary -i, effaced in most Indo-European languages. Both root and suffix ablaut is still well-represented, although again with significant innovations.

Categories

Tocharian verbs are conjugated in the following categories:[28]

  • Mood: indicative, subjunctive, optative, imperative.
  • Tense/aspect (in the indicative only): present, preterite, imperfect.
  • Voice: active, mediopassive, deponent.
  • Person: 1st, 2nd, 3rd.
  • Number: singular, dual, plural.
  • Causation: basic, causative.
  • Non-finite: active participle, mediopassive participle, present gerundive, subjunctive gerundive.

Classes

A given verb belongs to one of a large number of classes, according to its conjugation. As in Sanskrit, Ancient Greek, and (to a lesser extent) Latin, there are independent sets of classes in the indicative present, subjunctive, perfect, imperative, and to a limited extent optative and imperfect, and there is no general correspondence among the different sets of classes, meaning that each verb must be specified using a number of principal parts.

Present indicative

The most complex system is the present indicative, consisting of 12 classes, 8 thematic and 4 athematic, with distinct sets of thematic and athematic endings. The following classes occur in Tocharian B (some are missing in Tocharian A):

  • I: Athematic without suffix < PIE root athematic.
  • II: Thematic without suffix < PIE root thematic.
  • III: Thematic with PToch suffix *-ë-. Mediopassive only. Apparently reflecting consistent PIE o theme rather than the normal alternating o/e theme.
  • IV: Thematic with PToch suffix *-ɔ-. Mediopassive only. Same PIE origin as previous class, but diverging within Proto-Tocharian.
  • V: Athematic with PToch suffix *-ā-, likely from either PIE verbs ending in a syllabic laryngeal or PIE derived verbs in *-eh₂- (but extended to other verbs).
  • VI: Athematic with PToch suffix *-nā-, from PIE verbs in *-nH-.
  • VII: Athematic with infixed nasal, from PIE infixed nasal verbs.
  • VIII: Thematic with suffix -s-, possibly from PIE -sḱ-?
  • IX: Thematic with suffix -sk- < PIE -sḱ-.
  • X: Thematic with PToch suffix *-näsk/nāsk- (evidently a combination of classes VI and IX).
  • XI: Thematic in PToch suffix *-säsk- (evidently a combination of classes VIII and IX).
  • XII: Thematic with PToch suffix *-(ä)ññ- < either PIE *-n-y- (denominative to n-stem nouns) or PIE *-nH-y- (deverbative from PIE *-nH- verbs).

Palatalization of the final root consonant occurs in the 2nd singular, 3rd singular, 3rd dual and 2nd plural in thematic classes II and VIII-XII as a result of the original PIE thematic vowel e.

Subjunctive

The subjunctive likewise has 12 classes, denoted i through xii. Most are conjugated identically to the corresponding indicative classes; indicative and subjunctive are distinguished by the fact that a verb in a given indicative class will usually belong to a different subjunctive class.

In addition, four subjunctive classes differ from the corresponding indicative classes, two "special subjunctive" classes with differing suffixes and two "varying subjunctive" classes with root ablaut reflecting the PIE perfect.

Special subjunctives:

  • iv: Thematic with suffix i < PIE -y-, with consistent palatalization of final root consonant. Tocharian B only, rare.
  • vii: Thematic (not athematic, as in indicative class VII) with suffix ñ < PIE -n- (palatalized by thematic e, with palatalized variant generalized).

Varying subjunctives:

  • i: Athematic without suffix, with root ablaut reflecting PIE o-grade in active singular, zero-grade elsewhere. Derived from PIE perfect.
  • v: Identical to class i but with PToch suffix *-ā-, originally reflecting laryngeal-final roots but generalized.
Preterite

The preterite has 6 classes:

  • I: The most common class, with a suffix ā < PIE (i.e. roots ending in a laryngeal, although widely extended to other roots). This class shows root ablaut, with original e-grade (and palatalization of the initial root consonant) in the active singular, contrasting with zero-grade (and no palatalization) elsewhere.
  • II: This class has reduplication in Tocharian A (possibly reflecting the PIE reduplicated aorist). However, Tocharian B has a vowel reflecting long PIE ē, along with palatalization of the initial root consonant. There is no ablaut in this class.
  • III: This class has a suffix s in the 3rd singular active and throughout the mediopassive, evidently reflecting the PIE sigmatic aorist. Root ablaut occurs between active and mediopassive. A few verbs have palatalization in the active along with s in the 3rd singular, but no palatalization and no s in the mediopassive, along with no root ablaut (the vowel reflects PToch ë). This suggests that, for these verbs in particular, the active originates in the PIE sigmatic aorist (with s suffix and ē vocalism) while the mediopassive stems from the PIE perfect (with o vocalism).
  • IV: This class has suffix ṣṣā, with no ablaut. Most verbs in this class are causatives.
  • V: This class has suffix ñ(ñ)ā, with no ablaut. Only a few verbs belong to this class.
  • VI: This class, which has only two verbs, is derived from the PIE thematic aorist. As in Greek, this class has different endings from all the others, which partly reflect the PIE secondary endings (as expected for the thematic aorist).

All except preterite class VI have a common set of endings that stem from the PIE perfect endings, although with significant innovations.

Imperative

The imperative likewise shows 6 classes, with a unique set of endings, found only in the second person, and a prefix beginning with p-. This prefix usually reflects Proto-Tocharian *pä- but unexpected connecting vowels occasionally occur, and the prefix combines with vowel-initial and glide-initial roots in unexpected ways. The prefix is often compared with the Slavic perfective prefix po-, although the phonology is difficult to explain.

Classes i through v tend to co-occur with preterite classes I through V, although there are many exceptions. Class vi is not so much a coherent class as an "irregular" class with all verbs not fitting in other categories. The imperative classes tend to share the same suffix as the corresponding preterite (if any), but to have root vocalism that matches the vocalism of a verb's subjunctive. This includes the root ablaut of subjunctive classes i and v, which tend to co-occur with imperative class i.

Optative and imperfect

The optative and imperfect have related formations. The optative is generally built by adding i onto the subjunctive stem. Tocharian B likewise forms the imperfect by adding i onto the present indicative stem, while Tocharian A has 4 separate imperfect formations: usually ā is added to the subjunctive stem, but occasionally to the indicative stem, and sometimes either ā or s is added directly onto the root. The endings differ between the two languages: Tocharian A uses present endings for the optative and preterite endings for the imperfect, while Tocharian B uses the same endings for both, which are a combination of preterite and unique endings (the latter used in the singular active).

Endings

As suggested by the above discussion, there are a large number of sets of endings. The present-tense endings come in both thematic and athematic variants, although they are related, with the thematic endings generally reflecting a theme vowel (PIE e or o) plus the athematic endings. There are different sets for the preterite classes I through V; preterite class VI; the imperative; and in Tocharian B, in the singular active of the optative and imperfect. Furthermore, each set of endings comes with both active and mediopassive forms. The mediopassive forms are quite conservative, directly reflecting the PIE variation between -r in the present and -i in the past. (Most other languages with the mediopassive have generalized one of the two.)

The present-tense endings are almost completely divergent between Tocharian A and B. The following shows the thematic endings, with their origin:

Thematic present active indicative endings
Original PIE Tocharian B Tocharian A Notes
PIE source Actual form PIE source Actual form
1st sing *-o-h₂ *-o-h₂ + PToch -u -āu *-o-mi -am *-mi < PIE athematic present
2nd sing *-e-si *-e-th₂e? -'t *-e-th₂e -'t *-th₂e < PIE perfect; previous consonant palatalized; Tocharian B form should be -'ta
3rd sing *-e-ti *-e-nu -'(ä)ṃ *-e-se -'ṣ *-nu < PIE *nu "now"; previous consonant palatalized
1st pl *-o-mos? *-o-mō? -em(o) *-o-mes + V -amäs
2nd pl *-e-te *-e-tē-r + V -'cer *-e-te -'c *-r < PIE mediopassive?; previous consonant palatalized
3rd pl *-o-nti *-o-nt -eṃ *-o-nti -eñc < *-añc *-o-nt < PIE secondary ending

Comparison to other Indo-European languages

Tocharian vocabulary (sample)
English Tocharian A Tocharian B Ancient Greek Sanskrit Latin Proto-Germanic Gothic Old Irish Proto-Slavic Proto-Indo-European
one sas ṣe heîs, hen sa(kṛ́t) semel[a] *simla[a] simle[a] samail[a] *sǫ-[a] *sḗm > PToch *sems
two wu wi dúo dvā́ duo *twai twái *dъva *dwóh₁
three tre trai treîs tráyas trēs *þrīz þreis trí *trьje *tréyes
four śtwar śtwer téttares, téssares catvā́ras, catúras quattuor *fedwōr fidwōr cethair *četỳre *kʷetwóres
five päñ piś pénte páñca quīnque *fimf fimf cóic *pętь *pénkʷe
six ṣäk ṣkas héx ṣáṣ sex *sehs saihs *šestь *swéḱs
seven ṣpät ṣukt heptá saptá septem *sebun sibun secht *sedmь *septḿ̥
eight okät okt oktṓ aṣṭáu, aṣṭá octō *ahtōu ahtau ocht *osmь *oḱtṓw
nine ñu ñu ennéa náva novem *newun niun noí *dȅvętь *h₁néwn̥
ten śäk śak déka dáśa decem *tehun taihun deich *dȅsętь *déḱm̥t
hundred känt kante hekatón śatām centum *hundą hund cét *sъto *ḱm̥tóm
father pācar pācer patḗr pitṛ pater *fadēr fadar athair *ph₂tḗr
mother mācar mācer mḗtēr mātṛ māter *mōdēr mōdar máthair *màti *méh₂tēr
brother pracar procer phrā́tēr[a] bhrātṛ frāter *brōþēr brōþar bráthair *bràtrъ *bʰréh₂tēr
sister ṣar ṣer éor[a] svásṛ soror *swestēr swistar siur *sestrà *swésōr
horse yuk yakwe híppos áśva- equus *ehwaz aiƕs ech (Balto-Slavic *áśwāˀ) *h₁éḱwos
cow ko keu boûs gaúṣ bōs[b] *kūz (OE ) *govę̀do *gʷṓws
voice[b] vak vek épos[a] vāk vōx *wōhmaz[a] (Du gewag)[a] foccul[a] *vikъ[a] *wṓkʷs
name ñom ñem ónoma nāman- nōmen *namô namō ainmm *jь̏mę *h₁nómn̥
to milk mālkā mālkant amélgein mulgēre *melkaną miluks bligid (MIr) *melzti *h₂melǵ-eye
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cognate, with shifted meaning
  2. ^ a b Borrowed cognate, not native.

In traditional Indo-European studies, no hypothesis of a closer genealogical relationship of the Tocharian languages has been widely accepted by linguists. However, lexicostatistical and glottochronological approaches suggest the Anatolian languages, including Hittite, might be the closest relatives of Tocharian.[66][67][68] As an example, the same Proto-Indo-European root *h₂wrg(h)- (but not a common suffixed formation) can be reconstructed to underlie the words for 'wheel': Tocharian A wärkänt, Tokharian B yerkwanto, and Hittite ḫūrkis.

Contact with other languages

The Tocharian language stood in contact with various surrounding languages, including Iranian, Uralic, Turkic, and Sinitic languages. Tocharian borrowings, and other Indo-European loanwords transmitted through the Tocharians towards Uralic, Turkic and Sinitic speakers, have been confirmed.[69] Influence onto the Tocharian vowel system, which shows certain similarities to Uralic languages is explained through early contact during the Afanasievo culture. Another characteristic of Tocharian is its agglutinative case marking and case functions, as well as the lack of dative case.[70] Tocharian had a high social position within the region, and influenced the Turkic languages, which would later replace Tocharian in the Tarim Basin.[71]

Notable example

Most of the texts known from the Tocharians are religious, but one noted text is a fragment of a love poem in Tocharian B (manuscript B-496, found in Kizil):[72]

Tocharian B manuscript B-496
Translation
(English)
Transliteration Inscription
(Tocharian script)

I.
... for a thousand years however, Thou wilt tell the story Thy (...) I announce,
Heretofore there was no human being dearer to me than thee; likewise hereafter there will be no one dearer to me than thee.
Love for thee, affection for thee—breath of all that is life—and they shall not come to an end so long as there lasts life.
III.
Thus did I always think: "I will live well, the whole of my life, with one lover: no force, no deceit."
The god Karma alone knew this thought of mine; so he provoked quarrel; he ripped out my heart from thee;
He led thee afar; tore me apart; made me partake in all sorrows and took away the consolation thou wast.

... my life, spirit, and heart day-by-day...[73][74][75][76]

II.

(...) Yaltse pikwala (...) watäṃ weṃt no

Mā ñi cisa noṣ śomo ñem wnolme lāre tāka mā ra postaṃ cisa lāre mäsketär-ñ.

Ciṣṣe laraumñe ciṣṣe ārtañye pelke kalttarr śolämpa ṣṣe mā te stālle śol-wärñai.

III.

Taiysu pälskanoym sanai ṣaryompa śāyau karttse-śaulu-wärñai snai tserekwa snai nāte.

Yāmor-ñīkte ṣe cau ñi palskāne śarsa tusa ysaly ersate ciṣy araś ñi sälkāte,

Wāya ci lauke tsyāra ñiś wetke klyautka-ñ pāke po läklentas ciṣe tsārwo, sampāte.

(...) Śaul palsk araśñi, kom kom[73][74]

 
Tocharian B Love Poem, manuscript B496 (one of two fragments).

See also

References

Citations

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Sources

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Further reading

  • Bednarczuk, Leszek; Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld, and Barbara Podolak. “Non-Indo-European Features of the Tocharian Dialects”. In: Words and Dictionaries: A Festschrift for Professor Stanisław Stachowski on the Occasion of His 85th Birthday. Jagiellonian University Press, 2016. pp. 55–68.
  • Blažek, Václav; Schwarz, Michal (2017). The early Indo-Europeans in Central Asia and China: Cultural relations as reflected in language. Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Kulturwissenschaft. ISBN 978-3-85124-240-9.
  • Hackstein, Olav. “Collective and Feminine in Tocharian.” In: Multilingualism and History of Knowledge, Vol. 2: Linguistic Developments Along the Silkroad: Archaism and Innovation in Tocharian, edited by OLAV HACKSTEIN and RONALD I. KIM, 12:143–78. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2012. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt3fgk5q.8.
  • Lubotsky A. M. (1998). "Tocharian loan words in Old Chinese: Chariots, chariot gear, and town building". In: Mair V.H. (Ed.). The Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Peoples of Eastern Central Asia. Washington D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man. pp. 379–390. http://hdl.handle.net/1887/2683
  • Lubotsky A. M. (2003). "Turkic and Chinese loan words in Tocharian". In: Bauer B.L.M., Pinault G.-J. (Eds.). Language in time and space: A Festschrift for Werner Winter on the occasion of his 80th birthday. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 257–269. http://hdl.handle.net/1887/16336
  • Meier, Kristin and Peyrot, Michaël. "The Word for ‘Honey’ in Chinese, Tocharian and Sino-Vietnamese." In: Zeitschrift Der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 167, no. 1 (2017): 7–22. doi:10.13173/zeitdeutmorggese.167.1.0007.
  • Miliūtė-Chomičenkienė, Aleta. “Baltų-slavų-tocharų leksikos gretybės” [ETYMOLOGICAL PARALLELS IN BALTIC, SLAVIC AND TOCHARIAN IN “NAMES OF ANIMALS AND THEIR BODY PARTS"]. In: Baltistica XXVI (2): 135–143. 1990. DOI: 10.15388/baltistica.26.2.2075 (In Lithuanian)
  • Peyrot, Michaël. “On the Formation of the Tocharian Preterite Participle.” Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics 121 (2008): 69–83. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41637843.
  • Peyrot, Michaël. "The deviant typological profile of the Tocharian branch of Indo-European may be due to Uralic substrate influence". In: Indo-European Linguistics 7, 1 (2019): 72-121. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/22125892-00701007
  • PINAULT, GEORGES-JEAN. “TOKH. B ‘KUCAÑÑE’, A ‘KUCIṂ’ ET SKR. ‘TOKHARIKA’” . In: Indo-Iranian Journal 45, no. 4 (2002): 311–45. http://www.jstor.org/stable/24664155.
  • Witczak, Krzysztof Tomasz. “TWO TOCHARIAN BORROWINGS OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN”. In: Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 66, no. 4 (2013): 411–16. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43282527.

External links

  • Tocharian alphabet (from Omniglot)
  • Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien (TITUS):
    • Tocharian alphabet
    • Conjugation tables for Tocharian A and B
    • Tocharian A manuscripts from the Berlin Turfan Collection
  • Mark Dickens, "Everything you always wanted to know about Tocharian"
  • Tocharian Online by Todd B. Krause and Jonathan Slocum, free online lessons at the Linguistics Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Online dictionary of Tocharian B, based upon D. Q. Adams's A Dictionary of Tocharian B (1999)
  • Tocharian B Swadesh list (From Wiktionary)
  • Comprehensive Edition of Tocharian Manuscripts, University of Vienna, with images, transcriptions and (in many cases) translations and other information.
  • Sieg, E.; Siegling, W. (1921). Tocharische Sprachreste, 1.A: Transcription. Walter de Gruyter. Transcriptions of Tocharian A manuscripts.
  • Kim, Ronald I. (2012). (PDF). Institute for Comparative Linguistics, Charles University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-16. Retrieved 2014-05-01.
  • glottothèque – Ancient Indo-European Grammars online, an online collection of introductory videos to Ancient Indo-European languages produced by the University of Göttingen

tocharian, languages, tocharian, sometimes, tokharian, languages, ɛər, ɑːr, also, known, arśi, kuči, agnean, kuchean, kuchean, agnean, extinct, branch, indo, european, language, family, spoken, inhabitants, tarim, basin, tocharians, languages, known, from, man. The Tocharian sometimes Tokharian languages t e ˈ k ɛer i e n or t e ˈ k ɑːr i e n also known as Arsi Kuci Agnean Kuchean or Kuchean Agnean are an extinct branch of the Indo European language family spoken by inhabitants of the Tarim Basin the Tocharians 3 The languages are known from manuscripts dating from the 5th to the 8th century AD which were found in oasis cities on the northern edge of the Tarim Basin now part of Xinjiang in Northwest China and the Lop Desert The discovery of these languages in the early 20th century contradicted the formerly prevalent idea of an east west division of the Indo European language family as centum and satem languages and prompted reinvigorated study of the Indo European family Scholars studying these manuscripts in the early 20th century identified their authors with the Tokharoi a name used in ancient sources for people of Bactria Tokharistan Although this identification is now believed to be mistaken Tocharian remains the usual term for these languages 4 3 TocharianEthnicityTochariansGeographicdistributionTarim BasinExtinct9th century ADLinguistic classificationIndo EuropeanTocharianProto languageProto TocharianSubdivisionsTurfanian Tocharian A 1 Kuchean Tocharian B Kroranian Tocharian C 2 Glottologtokh1241 directly attested Tocharian A and B loanword traces Tocharian C The discovered manuscripts record two closely related languages called Tocharian A also East Tocharian or Turfanian and Tocharian B West Tocharian or Kuchean 5 6 The subject matter of the texts suggests that Tocharian A was more archaic and used as a Buddhist liturgical language while Tocharian B was more actively spoken in the entire area from Turfan in the east to Tumshuq in the west A body of loanwords and names found in Prakrit documents from the Lop Nor basin have been dubbed Tocharian C Kroranian A claimed find of ten Tocharian C texts written in Kharoṣṭhi script has been discredited 7 The oldest extant manuscripts in Tocharian B are now dated to the 5th or even late 4th century AD making it a language of Late Antiquity contemporary with Gothic Classical Armenian and Primitive Irish 8 Contents 1 Discovery and significance 2 Names 3 Writing system 4 Tocharian A and B 5 Tocharian C 6 Phonology 6 1 Vowels 6 2 Diphthongs 6 3 Consonants 7 Morphology 7 1 Nouns 7 2 Verbs 7 2 1 Categories 7 2 2 Classes 7 2 2 1 Present indicative 7 2 2 2 Subjunctive 7 2 2 3 Preterite 7 2 2 4 Imperative 7 2 2 5 Optative and imperfect 7 2 3 Endings 8 Comparison to other Indo European languages 8 1 Contact with other languages 9 Notable example 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksDiscovery and significance Edit Afanasievoculture Tocharians Indo Aryans Indo European migrations with location of the Afanasievo culture genetically identical to the Yamnaya culture of the Pontic steppes and their probable Tocharians descendants 9 The existence of the Tocharian languages and alphabet was not even suspected until archaeological exploration of the Tarim Basin by Aurel Stein in the early 20th century brought to light fragments of manuscripts in an unknown language dating from the 6th to 8th centuries AD 10 It soon became clear that these fragments were actually written in two distinct but related languages belonging to a hitherto unknown branch of Indo European now known as Tocharian Tocharian A Turfinian Agnean or East Tocharian natively arsi of Qarasahar ancient Agni Chinese Yanqi and Sanskrit Agni and Turpan ancient Turfan and Xoco and Tocharian B Kuchean or West Tocharian of Kucha and Tocharian A sites The geographical spread of Indo European languages Prakrit documents from 3rd century Kroran and Niya on the southeast edge of the Tarim Basin contain loanwords and names that appear to come from a closely related language referred to as Tocharian C 2 The discovery of Tocharian upset some theories about the relations of Indo European languages and revitalized their study In the 19th century it was thought that the division between centum and satem languages was a simple west east division with centum languages in the west The theory was undermined in the early 20th century by the discovery of Hittite a centum language in a relatively eastern location and Tocharian which was a centum language despite being the easternmost branch The result was a new hypothesis following the wave model of Johannes Schmidt suggesting that the satem isogloss represents a linguistic innovation in the central part of the Proto Indo European home range and the centum languages along the eastern and the western peripheries did not undergo that change 11 Several scholars identify the ancestors of the Tocharians with the Afanasievo culture of South Siberia c 3300 2500 BC an early eastern offshoot of the steppe cultures of the Don Volga area that later became the Yamnayans 12 13 14 Under this scenario Tocharian speakers would have immigrated to the Tarim Basin from the north at some later point On this basis Michael Peyrot argues that several of the most striking typological peculiarities of Tocharian are rooted in a prolonged contact of Proto Tocharian with an early stage of Proto Samoyedic in South Siberia Among others this might explain the merger of all three stop series e g t d dʰ gt t which must have led to a huge number of homonyms as well as the development of an agglutinative case system 15 Most scholars reject Walter Bruno Henning s proposed link to Gutian a language spoken on the Iranian plateau in the 22nd century BC and known only from personal names 16 Tocharian probably died out after 840 when the Uyghurs expelled from Mongolia by the Kyrgyz moved into the Tarim Basin 2 The theory is supported by the discovery of translations of Tocharian texts into Uyghur Some modern Chinese words may ultimately derive from a Tocharian or related source e g Old Chinese mjit 蜜 mi honey from Proto Tocharian ḿet e where ḿ is palatalized cf Tocharian B mit cognate with Old Church Slavonic med transliterated medŭ meaning honey and English mead 17 Names Edit Tocharian royal family King Queen and young blond haired Prince Kizil Cave 17 entrance wall lower left panel Hermitage Museum 18 19 20 21 A colophon to a Buddhist manuscript in Old Turkic from 800 AD states that it was translated from Sanskrit via a twgry language In 1907 Emil Sieg and Friedrich W K Muller guessed that this referred to the newly discovered language of the Turpan area 22 Sieg and Muller reading this name as toxri connected it with the ethnonym Tocharoi Ancient Greek Toxaroi Ptolemy VI 11 6 2nd century AD itself taken from Indo Iranian cf Old Persian tuxari Khotanese ttahvara and Sanskrit tukhara and proposed the name Tocharian German Tocharisch Ptolemy s Tocharoi are often associated by modern scholars with the Yuezhi of Chinese historical accounts who founded the Kushan empire 23 24 It is now clear that these people actually spoke Bactrian an Eastern Iranian language rather than the language of the Tarim manuscripts so the term Tocharian is considered a misnomer 25 26 27 Nevertheless it remains the standard term for the language of the Tarim Basin manuscripts 28 29 In 1938 Walter Bruno Henning found the term four twgry used in early 9th century manuscripts in Sogdian Middle Iranian and Uighur He argued that it referred to the region on the northeast edge of the Tarim including Agni and Karakhoja but not Kucha He thus inferred that the colophon referred to the Agnean language 30 31 Although the term twgry or toxri appears to be the Old Turkic name for the Tocharians it is not found in Tocharian texts 28 The apparent self designation arsi appears in Tocharian A texts Tocharian B texts use the adjective kusinne derived from kusi or kuci a name also known from Chinese and Turkic documents 28 The historian Bernard Sergent compounded these names to coin an alternative term Arsi Kuci for the family recently revised to Agni Kuci 32 but this name has not achieved widespread usage Writing system EditMain article Tocharian script Tocharian B inscription from the Kizil Caves in the Tocharian version of the Brahmi script reading 𑀲 𑀧𑀜𑀓 𑀢 𑀲𑀡 𑀓 𑀢𑀯𑀝 𑀲 𑀱𑀭 𑀲 𑀧𑀧 𑀬 𑀓 Traditional Ashokan Brahmi Se panakte saṅketavattse ṣarsa papaiykau This Buddha by Sanketava s hand was painted 33 34 35 36 Tocharian is documented in manuscript fragments mostly from the 8th century with a few earlier ones that were written on palm leaves wooden tablets and Chinese paper preserved by the extremely dry climate of the Tarim Basin Samples of the language have been discovered at sites in Kucha and Karasahr including many mural inscriptions Most of attested Tocharian was written in the Tocharian alphabet a derivative of the Brahmi alphabetic syllabary abugida also referred to as North Turkestan Brahmi or slanting Brahmi However a smaller amount was written in the Manichaean script in which Manichaean texts were recorded 37 38 It soon became apparent that a large proportion of the manuscripts were translations of known Buddhist works in Sanskrit and some of them were even bilingual facilitating decipherment of the new language Besides the Buddhist and Manichaean religious texts there were also monastery correspondence and accounts commercial documents caravan permits medical and magical texts and one love poem In 1998 the Chinese linguist Ji Xianlin published a translation and analysis of fragments of a Tocharian Maitreyasamiti Nataka discovered in 1974 in Yanqi 39 40 41 Tocharian A and B Edit Tocharian languages A blue B red and C green in the Tarim Basin 42 Tarim oasis towns are given as listed in the Book of Han c 2nd century BC with the areas of the squares proportional to population 43 Tocharian A and B are significantly different to the point of being mutually unintelligible A common Proto Tocharian language must precede the attested languages by several centuries probably dating to the late 1st millennium BC 44 Tocharian A is found only in the eastern part of the Tocharian speaking area and all extant texts are of a religious nature Tocharian B however is found throughout the range and in both religious and secular texts As a result it has been suggested that Tocharian A was a liturgical language no longer spoken natively while Tocharian B was the spoken language of the entire area 2 The hypothesized relationship of Tocharian A and B as liturgical and spoken forms respectively is sometimes compared with the relationship between Latin and the modern Romance languages or Classical Chinese and Mandarin However in both of these latter cases the liturgical language is the linguistic ancestor of the spoken language whereas no such relationship holds between Tocharian A and B In fact from a phonological perspective Tocharian B is significantly more conservative than Tocharian A and serves as the primary source for reconstructing Proto Tocharian Only Tocharian B preserves the following Proto Tocharian features stress distinctions final vowels diphthongs and o vs e distinction In turn the loss of final vowels in Tocharian A has led to the loss of certain Proto Tocharian categories still found in Tocharian B e g the vocative case and some of the noun verb and adjective declensional classes In their declensional and conjugational endings the two languages innovated in divergent ways with neither clearly simpler than the other For example both languages show significant innovations in the present active indicative endings but in radically different ways so that only the second person singular ending is directly cognate between the two languages and in most cases neither variant is directly cognate with the corresponding Proto Indo European PIE form The agglutinative secondary case endings in the two languages likewise stem from different sources showing parallel development of the secondary case system after the Proto Tocharian period Likewise some of the verb classes show independent origins e g the class II preterite which uses reduplication in Tocharian A possibly from the reduplicated aorist but long PIE e in Tocharian B possibly related to the long vowel perfect found in Latin legi feci etc 28 Tocharian B shows an internal chronological development three linguistic stages have been detected 45 The oldest stage is attested only in Kucha There are also the middle classical and the late stage 46 Tocharian C EditA third Tocharian language was first suggested by Thomas Burrow in the 1930s while discussing 3rd century documents from Kroran Loulan and Niya The texts were written in Gandhari Prakrit but contained loanwords of evidently Tocharian origin such as kilme district ṣoṣthaṃga tax collector and ṣilpoga document This hypothetical language later became generally known as Tocharian C it has also sometimes been called Kroranian or Krorainic 47 In papers published posthumously in 2018 Klaus T Schmidt a scholar of Tocharian presented a decipherment of 10 texts written in the Kharoṣṭhi script Schmidt claimed that these texts were written in a third Tocharian language he called Lolanisch 48 49 He also suggested that the language was closer to Tocharian B than to Tocharian A 49 In 2019 a group of linguists led by Georges Pinault and Michael Peyrot convened in Leiden to examine Schmidt s translations against the original texts They concluded that Schmidt s decipherment was fundamentally flawed that there was no reason to associate the texts with Kroran and that the language they recorded was neither Tocharian nor Indic but Iranian 7 50 Phonology Edit Left So called Tocharian donors fresco Qizil Tarim Basin These frescoes are associated with annotations in Tocharian and Sanskrit made by their painters They were carbon dated to 432 538 AD 51 52 The style of the swordsmen is now considered to belong to the Hephthalites from Tokharistan who occupied the Tarim Basin from 480 to 560 AD but spoke Bactrian an Eastern Iranian language 53 54 Right One of the painters with a label in Tocharian Citrakara Tutukasya The Painter Tutuka Cave of the Painters Kizil Caves circa 500 AD 55 56 57 Phonetically Tocharian languages are centum Indo European languages meaning that they merge the palatovelar consonants ḱ ǵ ǵʰ of Proto Indo European with the plain velars k g gʰ rather than palatalizing them to affricates or sibilants Centum languages are mostly found in western and southern Europe Greek Italic Celtic Germanic In that sense Tocharian to some extent like the Greek and the Anatolian languages seems to have been an isolate in the satem i e palatovelar to sibilant phonetic regions of Indo European speaking populations The discovery of Tocharian contributed to doubts that Proto Indo European had originally split into western and eastern branches today the centum satem division is not seen as a real familial division 58 59 Vowels Edit Front Central BackClose i i a ɨ u u Mid e e a e o o Open a a Tocharian A and Tocharian B have the same set of vowels but they often do not correspond to each other For example the sound a did not occur in Proto Tocharian Tocharian B a is derived from former stressed a or unstressed a reflected unchanged in Tocharian A while Tocharian A a stems from Proto Tocharian ɛ or ɔ reflected as e and o in Tocharian B and Tocharian A e and o stem largely from monophthongization of former diphthongs still present in Tocharian B Diphthongs Edit Diphthongs occur in Tocharian B only Closer componentis front Closer componentis backOpener component is unrounded ai ei au eu au au Opener component is rounded oy oi Consonants Edit Wooden tablet with an inscription showing Tocharian B in its Brahmic form Kucha Xinjiang 5th 8th century Tokyo National Museum The following table lists the reconstructed phonemes in Tocharian along with their standard transcription Because Tocharian is written in an alphabet used originally for Sanskrit and its descendants the transcription reflects Sanskrit phonology and may not represent Tocharian phonology accurately The Tocharian alphabet also has letters representing all of the remaining Sanskrit sounds but these appear only in Sanskrit loanwords and are not thought to have had distinct pronunciations in Tocharian There is some uncertainty as to actual pronunciation of some of the letters particularly those representing palatalized obstruents see below Bilabial Alveolar Alveolo palatal Palatal VelarPlosive p p t t k k Affricate ts ts c tɕ 2 Fricative s s s ɕ ṣ ʃ 3 Nasal m m n ṃ n 1 n ɲ ṅ ŋ 4Trill r r Approximant y j w w Lateral approximant l l ly ʎ n is transcribed by two different letters in the Tocharian alphabet depending on position Based on the corresponding letters in Sanskrit these are transcribed ṃ word finally including before certain clitics and n elsewhere but ṃ represents n not m The sound written c is thought to correspond to a alveolo palatal affricate tɕ in Sanskrit The Tocharian pronunciation tɕ is suggested by the common occurrence of the cluster sc but the exact pronunciation cannot be determined with certainty The sound written ṣ seems more likely to have been a palato alveolar sibilant ʃ as in English ship because it derives from a palatalized s 60 The sound ṅ ŋ occurs only before k or in some clusters where a k has been deleted between consonants It is clearly phonemic because sequences nk and nk also exist from syncope of a former a between them Morphology EditNouns Edit Tocharian has completely re worked the nominal declension system of Proto Indo European 61 The only cases inherited from the proto language are nominative genitive accusative and in Tocharian B only vocative in Tocharian the old accusative is known as the oblique case In addition to these primary cases however each Tocharian language has six cases formed by the addition of an invariant suffix to the oblique case although the set of six cases is not the same in each language and the suffixes are largely non cognate For example the Tocharian word yakwe Toch B yuk Toch A horse lt PIE eḱwos is declined as follows 28 Case Tocharian B Tocharian ASuffix Singular Plural Suffix Singular PluralNominative yakwe yakwi yuk yukanVocative yakwa Genitive yakwentse yakweṃtsi yukes yukassiOblique yakwe yakweṃ yuk yukasInstrumental yo yukyo yukasyoPerlative sa yakwesa yakwentsa a yuka yukasaComitative mpa yakwempa yakweṃmpa assal yukassal yukasassalAllative s c yakwes c yakweṃs c ac yukac yukasacAblative meṃ yakwemeṃ yakweṃmeṃ aṣ yukaṣ yukasaṣLocative ne yakwene yakweṃne aṃ yukaṃ yukasaṃCausative n yakwen yakweṃn The Tocharian A instrumental case rarely occurs with humans When referring to humans the oblique singular of most adjectives and of some nouns is marked in both varieties by an ending a ṃ which also appears in the secondary cases An example is eṅkwe Toch B oṅk Toch A man which belongs to the same declension as above but has oblique singular eṅkweṃ Toch B oṅkaṃ Toch A and corresponding oblique stems eṅkweṃ Toch B oṅkn Toch A for the secondary cases This is thought to stem from the generalization of n stem adjectives as an indication of determinative semantics seen most prominently in the weak adjective declension in the Germanic languages where it cooccurs with definite articles and determiners but also in Latin and Greek n stem nouns especially proper names formed from adjectives e g Latin Catō genitive Catōnis literally the sly one lt catus sly 62 63 Greek Platōn literally the broad shouldered one lt platus broad 28 Verbs Edit Ambassador from Kucha 龜茲國 Qiuci guo at the Chinese Tang dynasty court Wanghuitu 王会图 circa 650 AD In contrast the verbal conjugation system is quite conservative 64 The majority of Proto Indo European verbal classes and categories are represented in some manner in Tocharian although not necessarily with the same function 65 Some examples athematic and thematic present tenses including null y sḱ s n and nH suffixes as well as n infixes and various laryngeal ending stems o grade and possibly lengthened grade perfects although lacking reduplication or augment sigmatic reduplicated thematic and possibly lengthened grade aorists optatives imperatives and possibly PIE subjunctives In addition most PIE sets of endings are found in some form in Tocharian although with significant innovations including thematic and athematic endings primary non past and secondary past endings active and mediopassive endings and perfect endings Dual endings are still found although they are rarely attested and generally restricted to the third person The mediopassive still reflects the distinction between primary r and secondary i effaced in most Indo European languages Both root and suffix ablaut is still well represented although again with significant innovations Categories Edit Tocharian verbs are conjugated in the following categories 28 Mood indicative subjunctive optative imperative Tense aspect in the indicative only present preterite imperfect Voice active mediopassive deponent Person 1st 2nd 3rd Number singular dual plural Causation basic causative Non finite active participle mediopassive participle present gerundive subjunctive gerundive Classes Edit A given verb belongs to one of a large number of classes according to its conjugation As in Sanskrit Ancient Greek and to a lesser extent Latin there are independent sets of classes in the indicative present subjunctive perfect imperative and to a limited extent optative and imperfect and there is no general correspondence among the different sets of classes meaning that each verb must be specified using a number of principal parts Present indicative Edit The most complex system is the present indicative consisting of 12 classes 8 thematic and 4 athematic with distinct sets of thematic and athematic endings The following classes occur in Tocharian B some are missing in Tocharian A I Athematic without suffix lt PIE root athematic II Thematic without suffix lt PIE root thematic III Thematic with PToch suffix e Mediopassive only Apparently reflecting consistent PIE o theme rather than the normal alternating o e theme IV Thematic with PToch suffix ɔ Mediopassive only Same PIE origin as previous class but diverging within Proto Tocharian V Athematic with PToch suffix a likely from either PIE verbs ending in a syllabic laryngeal or PIE derived verbs in eh but extended to other verbs VI Athematic with PToch suffix na from PIE verbs in nH VII Athematic with infixed nasal from PIE infixed nasal verbs VIII Thematic with suffix s possibly from PIE sḱ IX Thematic with suffix sk lt PIE sḱ X Thematic with PToch suffix nask nask evidently a combination of classes VI and IX XI Thematic in PToch suffix sask evidently a combination of classes VIII and IX XII Thematic with PToch suffix a nn lt either PIE n y denominative to n stem nouns or PIE nH y deverbative from PIE nH verbs Palatalization of the final root consonant occurs in the 2nd singular 3rd singular 3rd dual and 2nd plural in thematic classes II and VIII XII as a result of the original PIE thematic vowel e Subjunctive Edit The subjunctive likewise has 12 classes denoted i through xii Most are conjugated identically to the corresponding indicative classes indicative and subjunctive are distinguished by the fact that a verb in a given indicative class will usually belong to a different subjunctive class In addition four subjunctive classes differ from the corresponding indicative classes two special subjunctive classes with differing suffixes and two varying subjunctive classes with root ablaut reflecting the PIE perfect Special subjunctives iv Thematic with suffix i lt PIE y with consistent palatalization of final root consonant Tocharian B only rare vii Thematic not athematic as in indicative class VII with suffix n lt PIE n palatalized by thematic e with palatalized variant generalized Varying subjunctives i Athematic without suffix with root ablaut reflecting PIE o grade in active singular zero grade elsewhere Derived from PIE perfect v Identical to class i but with PToch suffix a originally reflecting laryngeal final roots but generalized Preterite Edit The preterite has 6 classes I The most common class with a suffix a lt PIE Ḥ i e roots ending in a laryngeal although widely extended to other roots This class shows root ablaut with original e grade and palatalization of the initial root consonant in the active singular contrasting with zero grade and no palatalization elsewhere II This class has reduplication in Tocharian A possibly reflecting the PIE reduplicated aorist However Tocharian B has a vowel reflecting long PIE e along with palatalization of the initial root consonant There is no ablaut in this class III This class has a suffix s in the 3rd singular active and throughout the mediopassive evidently reflecting the PIE sigmatic aorist Root ablaut occurs between active and mediopassive A few verbs have palatalization in the active along with s in the 3rd singular but no palatalization and no s in the mediopassive along with no root ablaut the vowel reflects PToch e This suggests that for these verbs in particular the active originates in the PIE sigmatic aorist with s suffix and e vocalism while the mediopassive stems from the PIE perfect with o vocalism IV This class has suffix ṣṣa with no ablaut Most verbs in this class are causatives V This class has suffix n n a with no ablaut Only a few verbs belong to this class VI This class which has only two verbs is derived from the PIE thematic aorist As in Greek this class has different endings from all the others which partly reflect the PIE secondary endings as expected for the thematic aorist All except preterite class VI have a common set of endings that stem from the PIE perfect endings although with significant innovations Imperative Edit The imperative likewise shows 6 classes with a unique set of endings found only in the second person and a prefix beginning with p This prefix usually reflects Proto Tocharian pa but unexpected connecting vowels occasionally occur and the prefix combines with vowel initial and glide initial roots in unexpected ways The prefix is often compared with the Slavic perfective prefix po although the phonology is difficult to explain Classes i through v tend to co occur with preterite classes I through V although there are many exceptions Class vi is not so much a coherent class as an irregular class with all verbs not fitting in other categories The imperative classes tend to share the same suffix as the corresponding preterite if any but to have root vocalism that matches the vocalism of a verb s subjunctive This includes the root ablaut of subjunctive classes i and v which tend to co occur with imperative class i Optative and imperfect Edit The optative and imperfect have related formations The optative is generally built by adding i onto the subjunctive stem Tocharian B likewise forms the imperfect by adding i onto the present indicative stem while Tocharian A has 4 separate imperfect formations usually a is added to the subjunctive stem but occasionally to the indicative stem and sometimes either a or s is added directly onto the root The endings differ between the two languages Tocharian A uses present endings for the optative and preterite endings for the imperfect while Tocharian B uses the same endings for both which are a combination of preterite and unique endings the latter used in the singular active Endings Edit As suggested by the above discussion there are a large number of sets of endings The present tense endings come in both thematic and athematic variants although they are related with the thematic endings generally reflecting a theme vowel PIE e or o plus the athematic endings There are different sets for the preterite classes I through V preterite class VI the imperative and in Tocharian B in the singular active of the optative and imperfect Furthermore each set of endings comes with both active and mediopassive forms The mediopassive forms are quite conservative directly reflecting the PIE variation between r in the present and i in the past Most other languages with the mediopassive have generalized one of the two The present tense endings are almost completely divergent between Tocharian A and B The following shows the thematic endings with their origin Thematic present active indicative endings Original PIE Tocharian B Tocharian A NotesPIE source Actual form PIE source Actual form1st sing o h o h PToch u au o mi am mi lt PIE athematic present2nd sing e si e th e t e th e t th e lt PIE perfect previous consonant palatalized Tocharian B form should be ta3rd sing e ti e nu a ṃ e se ṣ nu lt PIE nu now previous consonant palatalized1st pl o mos o mō em o o mes V amas2nd pl e te e te r V cer e te c r lt PIE mediopassive previous consonant palatalized3rd pl o nti o nt eṃ o nti enc lt anc o nt lt PIE secondary endingComparison to other Indo European languages EditTocharian vocabulary sample English Tocharian A Tocharian B Ancient Greek Sanskrit Latin Proto Germanic Gothic Old Irish Proto Slavic Proto Indo Europeanone sas ṣe heis hen sa kṛ t semel a simla a simle a samail a sǫ a sḗm gt PToch semstwo wu wi duo dva duo twai twai da dva dwoh three tre trai treis trayas tres thriz threis tri trje treyesfour stwar stwer tettares tessares catva ras caturas quattuor fedwōr fidwōr cethair cetỳre kʷetworesfive pan pis pente panca quinque fimf fimf coic pet penkʷesix ṣak ṣkas hex ṣaṣ sex sehs saihs se sest sweḱsseven ṣpat ṣukt hepta sapta septem sebun sibun secht sedm septḿ eight okat okt oktṓ aṣṭau aṣṭa octō ahtōu ahtau ocht osm oḱtṓwnine nu nu ennea nava novem newun niun noi dȅvet h newn ten sak sak deka dasa decem tehun taihun deich dȅset deḱm thundred kant kante hekaton satam centum hunda hund cet sto ḱm tomfather pacar pacer patḗr pitṛ pater fader fadar athair ph tḗrmother macar macer mḗter matṛ mater mōder mōdar mathair mati meh terbrother pracar procer phra ter a bhratṛ frater brōther brōthar brathair bratr bʰreh tersister ṣar ṣer eor a svasṛ soror swester swistar siur sestra swesōrhorse yuk yakwe hippos asva equus ehwaz aiƕs ech Balto Slavic aswaˀ h eḱwoscow ko keu bous gauṣ bōs b kuz OE cu bo gove do gʷṓwsvoice b vak vek epos a vak vōx wōhmaz a Du gewag a foccul a vik a wṓkʷsname nom nem onoma naman nōmen namo namō ainmm j me h nomn to milk malka malkant amelgein mulgere melkana miluks bligid MIr melzti h melǵ eye a b c d e f g h i j k l Cognate with shifted meaning a b Borrowed cognate not native In traditional Indo European studies no hypothesis of a closer genealogical relationship of the Tocharian languages has been widely accepted by linguists However lexicostatistical and glottochronological approaches suggest the Anatolian languages including Hittite might be the closest relatives of Tocharian 66 67 68 As an example the same Proto Indo European root h wrg h but not a common suffixed formation can be reconstructed to underlie the words for wheel Tocharian A warkant Tokharian B yerkwanto and Hittite ḫurkis Contact with other languages Edit The Tocharian language stood in contact with various surrounding languages including Iranian Uralic Turkic and Sinitic languages Tocharian borrowings and other Indo European loanwords transmitted through the Tocharians towards Uralic Turkic and Sinitic speakers have been confirmed 69 Influence onto the Tocharian vowel system which shows certain similarities to Uralic languages is explained through early contact during the Afanasievo culture Another characteristic of Tocharian is its agglutinative case marking and case functions as well as the lack of dative case 70 Tocharian had a high social position within the region and influenced the Turkic languages which would later replace Tocharian in the Tarim Basin 71 Notable example EditMost of the texts known from the Tocharians are religious but one noted text is a fragment of a love poem in Tocharian B manuscript B 496 found in Kizil 72 Tocharian B manuscript B 496 Translation English Transliteration Inscription Tocharian script I for a thousand years however Thou wilt tell the story Thy I announce Heretofore there was no human being dearer to me than thee likewise hereafter there will be no one dearer to me than thee Love for thee affection for thee breath of all that is life and they shall not come to an end so long as there lasts life III Thus did I always think I will live well the whole of my life with one lover no force no deceit The god Karma alone knew this thought of mine so he provoked quarrel he ripped out my heart from thee He led thee afar tore me apart made me partake in all sorrows and took away the consolation thou wast my life spirit and heart day by day 73 74 75 76 II Yaltse pikwala wataṃ weṃt noMa ni cisa noṣ somo nem wnolme lare taka ma ra postaṃ cisa lare masketar n Ciṣṣe laraumne ciṣṣe artanye pelke kalttarr solampa ṣṣe ma te stalle sol warnai III Taiysu palskanoym sanai ṣaryompa sayau karttse saulu warnai snai tserekwa snai nate Yamor nikte ṣe cau ni palskane sarsa tusa ysaly ersate ciṣy aras ni salkate Waya ci lauke tsyara nis wetke klyautka n pake po laklentas ciṣe tsarwo sampate Saul palsk arasni kom kom 73 74 Tocharian B Love Poem manuscript B496 one of two fragments See also EditLanguage families and languages Tocharians Tocharian and Indo European Studies journal References EditCitations Edit Tocharian A language Britannica a b c d Mallory J P 2010 Bronze Age Languages of the Tarim Basin PDF Expedition 52 3 44 53 a b Diringer David 1953 First published 1948 The Alphabet A Key to the History of Mankind Second and revised ed London Hutchinson s Scientific and Technical Publications pp 347 348 Walter Mariko Namba 1998 Tokharian Buddhism in Kucha Buddhism of Indo European Centum Speakers in Chinese Turkestan before the 10th Century C E PDF Sino Platonic Papers 85 2 4 Tocharian the Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Credo Reference Introduction to Tocharian a b Adams Douglas Q 25 September 2019 Tocharian C Again The Plot Thickens and the Mystery Deepens Language Log Retrieved 25 September 2019 Kim Ronald I 2018 One Hundred Years of Re Reconstruction Hittite Tocharian and the Continuing Revision of Proto Indo European In Rieken Elisabeth ed 100 Jahre Entzifferung des Hethitischen Morphosyntaktische Kategorien in Sprachgeschichte und Forschung Akten der Arbeitstagung der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft vom 21 bis 23 September 2015 in Marburg Wiesbaden Reichert Verlag p 170 footnote 44 Retrieved 13 September 2019 Narasimhan Vagheesh M Patterson Nick Moorjani Priya Rohland Nadin Bernardos Rebecca 2019 The Formation of Human Populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6457 eaat7487 doi 10 1126 science aat7487 PMC 6822619 PMID 31488661 Deuel Leo 1970 First published Knopf NY 1965 XXI Testaments of Time Baltimore Pelican Books pp 425 455 Renfrew 1990 pp 107 108 Anthony David W 2010 The Horse the Wheel and Language How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World Princeton University Press pp 264 265 308 ISBN 978 1400831104 Mallory amp Mair 2000 Klejn L S L S Klejn 2000 Migratsiya tokharov v svete arkheologii Migraciya toharov v svete arheologii Migration of Tokharians in the Light of Archaeological Data Stratum Plus in Russian 2000 2 178 187 Peyrot Michael 2019 The Deviant Typological Profile of the Tocharian Branch of Indo European May Be Due to Uralic Substrate Influence Indo European Linguistics 7 1 72 121 doi 10 1163 22125892 00701007 Mallory amp Mair 2000 pp 281 282 Boltz 1999 p 87 Schuessler 2007 p 383 Baxter 1992 p 191 Karlgren 1957 p 405r Proto Tocharian and Tocharian B forms from Peyrot 2008 p 56 References BDce 888 889 MIK III 8875 now in the Hermitage Museum Sheng dao wenhua zazhi 2020 01 30 E li ai er mǐ tǎ shen bo wu guǎn cang ke zi er shi ku bi hua 俄立艾爾米塔什博物館藏克孜爾石窟壁畫 sohu com in Chinese Image 16 in Yaldiz Marianne 1987 Archaologie und Kunstgeschichte Chinesisch Zentralasiens Xinjiang Archeology and Art History of Sino Central Asia Xinjiang in German Brill p xv ISBN 978 90 04 07877 2 The images of donors in Cave 17 are seen in two fragments with numbers MIK 8875 and MIK 8876 One of them with halo may be identified as king of Kucha in Ghose Rajeshwari 2008 Kizil on the Silk Road Crossroads of Commerce amp Meeting of Minds Marg Publications p 127 note 22 ISBN 978 81 85026 85 5 The panel of Tocharian donors and Buddhist monks which was at the MIK MIK 8875 disappeared during World War II and was discovered by Yaldiz in 2002 in the Hermitage Museum page 65 note 30 Le Coq Albert von Waldschmidt Ernst 1922 Die buddhistische spatantike in Mittelasien VI Berlin D Reimer etc pp 68 70 Mallory amp Mair 2000 pp 280 281 Mallory amp Mair 2000 pp 281 Beckwith 2009 pp 380 383 Adams Douglas Q 2001 Tocharian In Garry Jane Rubino Carl R Galvez Bodomo Adams B Faber Alice French Robert eds Facts about the World s Languages An Encyclopedia of the World s Major Languages Past and Present H W Wilson p 748 ISBN 978 0 8242 0970 4 Also arguing against equating the Tocharians with the Tocharoi is the fact that the actual language of the Tocharoi when attested to in the second and third centuries of our era is indubitably Iranian Hansen 2012 p 72 In fact we know that the Yuezhi used Bactrian an Iranian language written in Greek characters as an official language For this reason Tocharian is a misnomer no extant evidence suggests that the residents of the Tocharistan region of Afghanistan spoke the Tocharian language recorded in the documents found in the Kucha region Henning 1949 p 161 At the same time we can now finally dispose of the name Tokharian This misnomer has been supported by three reasons all of them now discredited a b c d e f g Krause Todd B Slocum Jonathan Tocharian Online Series Introduction University of Texas at Austin Retrieved 17 April 2020 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q eds 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture London Fitzroy Dearborn p 509 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Henning 1938 pp 559 561 Hansen 2012 pp 71 72 Sergent Bernard 2005 1995 Les Indo Europeens Histoire langues mythes 2nd ed Payot pp 113 117 Hartel Herbert Yaldiz Marianne 1982 Along the Ancient Silk Routes Central Asian Art from the West Berlin State Museums an Exhibition Lent by the Museum Fur Indische Kunst Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz Berlin Federal Republic of Germany Metropolitan Museum of Art p 107 ISBN 978 0 87099 300 8 Le Coq Albert von Die Buddhistische Spatantike in Mittelasien vol 5 p 10 A dictionary of Tocharian B www win tue nl In Ashokan Brahmi 𑀲 𑀧𑀜𑀓 𑀢 𑀲𑀡 𑀓 𑀢𑀯𑀝 𑀲 𑀱𑀭 𑀲 𑀧𑀧 𑀬 𑀓 Daniels 1996 p 531 Campbell 2000 p 1666 Fragments of the Tocharian Andrew Leonard How the World Works Salon com January 29 2008 Archived 2008 02 01 at the Wayback Machine Wright J C 1999 Review Fragments of the Tocharian A Maitreyasamiti Naṭaka of the Xinjiang Museum China In Collaboration with Werner Winter and Georges Jean Pinault by Ji Xianlin Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 62 2 367 370 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00017079 JSTOR 3107526 S2CID 246638642 Ji Xianlin Winter Werner Pinault Georges Jean 1998 Fragments of the Tocharian A Maitreyasamiti Nataka of the Zinjiang Museum China Mouton De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 014904 3 Mallory amp Mair 2000 p 274 Mallory amp Mair 2000 pp 67 68 Kim Ronald 2006 Tocharian In Brown Keith ed Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics 2nd ed Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 044299 0 M Peyrot Variation and Change in Tocharian B Amsterdam and New York 2008 Michael Peyrot 2015 TOCHARIAN LANGUAGE iranicaonline org Mallory J P The Problem of Tocharian Origins An Archaeological Perspective PDF Sino Platonic Papers 259 Zimmer Klaus T Zimmer Stefan Dr Ute Hempen 2019 K T Schmidt Nachgelassene Schriften in German ISBN 9783944312538 OCLC 1086566510 a b Language Log Tocharian C its discovery and implications Retrieved 2019 04 04 Dragoni Federico Schoubben Niels Peyrot Michael 2020 The Formal Kharoṣṭhi script from the Northern Tarim Basin in Northwest China may write an Iranian language Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 73 3 335 373 doi 10 1556 062 2020 00015 MUZIO CIRO LO 2008 Remarks on the Paintings from the Buddhist Monastery of Fayaz Tepe Southern Uzbekistan Bulletin of the Asia Institute 22 202 note 45 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049243 Waugh Daniel C Historian University of Washington MIA Berlin Turfan Collection Kizil depts washington edu Kageyama Etsuko 2016 Change of suspension systems of daggers and swords in eastern Eurasia Its relation to the Hephthalite occupation of Central Asia PDF ZINBUN 46 200 202 Kurbanov Aydogdy 2014 The Hephthalites Iconographical Materials PDF Tyragetia 8 324 Hertel Herbert 1982 Along the Ancient Silk Routes Central Asian Art from the West Berlin State Museums pp 55 56 Rowland Benjamin 1970 The Art of Central Asia p 104 The label at his feet reads The Painter Tutuka in Hartel Herbert Yaldiz Marianne Kunst Germany Museum fur Indische N Y Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 1982 Along the Ancient Silk Routes Central Asian Art from the West Berlin State Museums an Exhibition Lent by the Museum Fur Indische Kunst Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz Berlin Federal Republic of Germany Metropolitan Museum of Art p 74 ISBN 978 0 87099 300 8 Renfrew 1990 p 107 Baldi Philip 1999 The Foundations of Latin Walter de Gruyter p 39 ISBN 978 3 11 016294 3 Ringe Donald A 1996 On the Chronology of Sound Changes in Tocharian Volume I From Proto Indo European to Proto Tocharian New Haven CT American Oriental Society Beekes 1995 p 92 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 Cato Charlton T Lewis Charles Short A Latin Dictionary Căto A Latin Dictionary Clarendon Press Archived from the original on 2022 05 07 via the Perseus Project Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 catus Charlton T Lewis Charles Short A Latin Dictionary C cătillatĭo cătus A Latin Dictionary Clarendon Press Archived from the original on 2022 05 07 via the Perseus Project Beekes 1995 p 20 Douglas Q Adams On the Development of the Tocharian Verbal System Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 98 No 3 Jul Sep 1978 pp 277 288 Holm Hans J 2008 The Distribution of Data in Word Lists and its Impact on the Subgrouping of Languages In Christine Preisach Hans Burkhardt Lars Schmidt Thieme Reinhold Decker Editors Data Analysis Machine Learning and Applications Proc of the 31st Annual Conference of the German Classification Society GfKl University of Freiburg March 7 9 2007 Springer Verlag Heidelberg Berlin Vaclav Blazek 2007 From August Schleicher to Sergej Starostin On the development of the tree diagram models of the Indo European languages Journal of Indo European Studies 35 1 amp 2 82 109 Bouckaert Remco Lemey Philippe Dunn Michael Greenhill Simon J Alekseyenko Alexander V Drummond Alexei J Gray Russell D Suchard Marc A Atkinson Quentin D 2012 Mapping the Origins and Expansion of the Indo European Language Family Science 337 6097 957 960 Bibcode 2012Sci 337 957B doi 10 1126 science 1219669 PMC 4112997 PMID 22923579 Bjorn Rasmus G 2022 Indo European loanwords and exchange in Bronze Age Central and East Asia Six new perspectives on prehistoric exchange in the Eastern Steppe Zone Evolutionary Human Sciences 4 e23 doi 10 1017 ehs 2022 16 ISSN 2513 843X S2CID 248358873 Peyrot Michael 2019 12 02 The deviant typological profile of the Tocharian branch of Indo European may be due to Uralic substrate influence Indo European Linguistics 7 1 72 121 doi 10 1163 22125892 00701007 ISSN 2212 5884 S2CID 213924514 Tocharian agglutinative case inflexion as well as its single series of voiceless stops the two most striking typological deviations from Proto Indo European can be explained through influence from Uralic A number of other typological features of Tocharian may likewise be interpreted as due to contact with a Uralic language The supposed contacts are likely to be associated with the Afanas evo Culture of South Siberia This Indo European culture probably represents an intermediate phase in the movement of speakers of early Tocharian from the Proto Indo European homeland in the Eastern European steppe to the Tarim Basin in Northwest China At the same time the Proto Samoyedic homeland must have been in or close to the Afanas evo area A close match between the Pre Proto Tocharian and Pre Proto Samoyedic vowel systems is a strong indication that the Uralic contact language was an early form of Samoyedic Bjorn Rasmus G 2022 Indo European loanwords and exchange in Bronze Age Central and East Asia Six new perspectives on prehistoric exchange in the Eastern Steppe Zone Evolutionary Human Sciences 4 e23 doi 10 1017 ehs 2022 16 ISSN 2513 843X S2CID 248358873 Carling Gerd Georg August Universitat Gottingen Tocharian p 16 PDF a b Adams Douglas Q Peyrot Michael Pinault Georges Jean Olander Thomas Rasmussen Jens Elmegard 2013 More Thoughts on Tocharian B Prosody in Tocharian and Indo European Studies vol 14 Museum Tusculanum Press pp 26 28 ISBN 978 87 635 4066 7 a b Chrestomathie tokharienne Textes et grammaire Georges Jean Pinault Peeters 2008 Language Log Tocharian love poem World Atlas of Poetic Traditions Tocharian Sources Edit Adams Douglas Q 1988 Tocharian historical phonology and morphology New Haven CT American Oriental Society ISBN 978 0 940490 71 0 2013 A Dictionary of Tocharian B Leiden Studies in Indo European vol 10 2nd revised and greatly enlarged ed Amsterdam New York Rodopi ISBN 978 94 012 0936 6 Baxter William H 1992 A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 012324 1 Beckwith Christopher 2009 Empires of the Silk Road A History of Central Asia from the Bronze Age to the Present Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15034 5 Beekes Robert S P 1995 Comparative Indo European linguistics an Introduction J Benjamins ISBN 978 90 272 2151 3 Boltz William 1999 Language and Writing in Michael Loewe Shaughnessy Edward L eds The Cambridge History of Ancient China Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 74 123 ISBN 978 0 521 47030 8 Campbell George 2000 Compendium of the World s Languages Second Edition Volume II Ladkhi to Zuni Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 20298 5 Carling Gerd 2009 Dictionary and Thesaurus of Tocharian A Volume 1 a j in collaboration with Georges Jean Pinault and Werner Winter Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 05814 8 Daniels Peter 1996 The Worlds Writing Systems Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507993 0 Hansen Valerie 2012 The Silk Road A New History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515931 8 Henning W B 1938 Argi and the Tokharians Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 9 3 545 571 doi 10 1017 S0041977X0007837X JSTOR 608222 S2CID 161147644 1949 The name of the Tokharian language PDF Asia Major New Series vol 1 pp 158 162 Karlgren Bernhard 1957 Grammata Serica Recensa Stockholm Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities OCLC 1999753 Krause Wolfgang Thomas Werner 1960 Tocharisches Elementarbuch Heidelberg Carl Winter Universitatsverlag Levi Sylvain 1913 Tokharian Pratimoksa Fragment The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland pp 109 120 Mallory J P Mair Victor H 2000 The Tarim Mummies London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05101 1 Malzahn Melanie ed 2007 Instrumenta Tocharica Heidelberg Carl Winter Universitatsverlag ISBN 978 3 8253 5299 8 Peyrot Michael 2008 Variation and Change in Tocharian B Amsterdam Rodopoi Pinault Georges Jean 2008 Chrestomathie tokharienne Textes et grammaire Leuven Paris Peeters Collection linguistique publiee par la Societe de Linguistique de Paris no XCV ISBN 978 90 429 2168 9 Renfrew Colin 1990 Archaeology and Language The Puzzle of Indo European Origins CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 38675 3 Ringe Donald A 1996 On the Chronology of Sound Changes in Tocharian Volume I From Proto Indo European to Proto Tocharian New Haven CT American Oriental Society Schmalsteig William R 1974 Tokharian and Baltic Lituanus v 20 no 3 Schuessler Axel 2007 ABC Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2975 9 Winter Werner 1998 Tocharian In Ramat Giacalone Anna and Paolo Ramat eds The Indo European languages 154 168 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 06449 1 Further reading EditBednarczuk Leszek Elzbieta Manczak Wohlfeld and Barbara Podolak Non Indo European Features of the Tocharian Dialects In Words and Dictionaries A Festschrift for Professor Stanislaw Stachowski on the Occasion of His 85th Birthday Jagiellonian University Press 2016 pp 55 68 Blazek Vaclav Schwarz Michal 2017 The early Indo Europeans in Central Asia and China Cultural relations as reflected in language Innsbruck Innsbrucker Beitrage zur Kulturwissenschaft ISBN 978 3 85124 240 9 Hackstein Olav Collective and Feminine in Tocharian In Multilingualism and History of Knowledge Vol 2 Linguistic Developments Along the Silkroad Archaism and Innovation in Tocharian edited by OLAV HACKSTEIN and RONALD I KIM 12 143 78 Austrian Academy of Sciences Press 2012 https doi org 10 2307 j ctt3fgk5q 8 Lubotsky A M 1998 Tocharian loan words in Old Chinese Chariots chariot gear and town building In Mair V H Ed The Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Peoples of Eastern Central Asia Washington D C Institute for the Study of Man pp 379 390 http hdl handle net 1887 2683 Lubotsky A M 2003 Turkic and Chinese loan words in Tocharian In Bauer B L M Pinault G J Eds Language in time and space A Festschrift for Werner Winter on the occasion of his 80th birthday Berlin New York Mouton de Gruyter pp 257 269 http hdl handle net 1887 16336 Meier Kristin and Peyrot Michael The Word for Honey in Chinese Tocharian and Sino Vietnamese In Zeitschrift Der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 167 no 1 2017 7 22 doi 10 13173 zeitdeutmorggese 167 1 0007 Miliute Chomicenkiene Aleta Baltu slavu tocharu leksikos gretybes ETYMOLOGICAL PARALLELS IN BALTIC SLAVIC AND TOCHARIAN IN NAMES OF ANIMALS AND THEIR BODY PARTS In Baltistica XXVI 2 135 143 1990 DOI 10 15388 baltistica 26 2 2075 In Lithuanian Peyrot Michael On the Formation of the Tocharian Preterite Participle Historische Sprachforschung Historical Linguistics 121 2008 69 83 http www jstor org stable 41637843 Peyrot Michael The deviant typological profile of the Tocharian branch of Indo European may be due to Uralic substrate influence In Indo European Linguistics 7 1 2019 72 121 doi https doi org 10 1163 22125892 00701007 PINAULT GEORGES JEAN TOKH B KUCANNE A KUCIṂ ET SKR TOKHARIKA In Indo Iranian Journal 45 no 4 2002 311 45 http www jstor org stable 24664155 Witczak Krzysztof Tomasz TWO TOCHARIAN BORROWINGS OF ORIENTAL ORIGIN In Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 66 no 4 2013 411 16 http www jstor org stable 43282527 External links EditTocharian alphabet from Omniglot Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text und Sprachmaterialien TITUS Tocharian alphabet Conjugation tables for Tocharian A and B Tocharian A manuscripts from the Berlin Turfan Collection Mark Dickens Everything you always wanted to know about Tocharian Tocharian Online by Todd B Krause and Jonathan Slocum free online lessons at the Linguistics Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin Online dictionary of Tocharian B based upon D Q Adams s A Dictionary of Tocharian B 1999 Tocharian B Swadesh list From Wiktionary Comprehensive Edition of Tocharian Manuscripts University of Vienna with images transcriptions and in many cases translations and other information Sieg E Siegling W 1921 Tocharische Sprachreste 1 A Transcription Walter de Gruyter Transcriptions of Tocharian A manuscripts Kim Ronald I 2012 Introduction to Tocharian PDF Institute for Comparative Linguistics Charles University Archived from the original PDF on 2018 07 16 Retrieved 2014 05 01 glottotheque Ancient Indo European Grammars online an online collection of introductory videos to Ancient Indo European languages produced by the University of Gottingen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tocharian languages amp oldid 1153867785, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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