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Topic: Hattic language


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 Hattic language
Hattic was a non-Indo-European language spoken in Asia Minor between the 3rd and the 2nd millennia BC, before the appearance of the Hittites.
Hattic was a non-Indo-European language, and it appears to be related to the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family.
Its position in the hypothetical North Caucasian family and other proposed classifications of the languages of the Caucasus is still the subject of much debate among linguists.
www.xasa.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/h/ha/hattic_language.html   (219 words)

  
  Hattic language   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Hattic was a non-Indo-European language spoken in Asia Minor between the 3rd and the 2nd millennia BC, before the appearance of the Hittites.
Hattic was a non-Indo-European language, and it appears to be related to the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family.
The names "Hattic" and "Hittite" are modern designations, and both are apparently derived through tortuous routes from the same word, the ancient name of the core region where the two cultures flourished — which has been reconstructed as Hatti in the Hittite language.
encyclopedia.codeboy.net /wikipedia/h/ha/hattic_language.html   (223 words)

  
 Omnipelagos.com ~ article "Hattic language"
Hattic was a language spoken in Asia Minor between the 3rd and the 2nd millennia BC.
The Nesians eventually absorbed or replaced the Hattic speakers (Hattians); but they retained the name Hatti for the region, and the use of Hattic for their religion.
Hattic appears to be related to the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family.
www.omnipelagos.com /entry?n=hattic_language   (247 words)

  
 Hittites - Crystalinks
The history of the Hittite civilization is known mostly from cuneiform texts found in the area of their empire, and from diplomatic and commercial correspondence found in various archives in Egypt and the Middle East.
This and the fact that one of Lydia's kings known to the Greeks bore the Hittite royal name Myrsilis (Mursilis) may indicate that this state was the purest cultural and ethnic continuation of the former Hittites.
The last trace of this language persisted until the 5th century AD, according to some Church Fathers, when it was known as the tiny dialect of Isaurian, spoken in only one or two villages.
www.crystalinks.com /hittites.html   (2810 words)

  
 Who were Illyrians   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The principal language of the Italic group is Latin, originally the speech of the city of Rome and the ancestor of the modern Romance languages: Italian, Romanian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, etc. The earliest Latin inscriptions apparently date from the 6th century BC, with literature beginning in the 3rd century.
The Hittite language is known from the approximately 25,000 tablets or fragments of tablets preserved in the archives of Bogazköy-Hattusa, excavated by German archaeologists beginning in 1905.
Old Persian was the administrative language of the early Achaemenian dynasty dating from the 6th century BC; and an eastern Middle Indo-Aryan dialect was the language of the chancellery of the Mauryan emperor Ashoka in India in the mid-3rd century BC.
www.geocities.com /iliria1   (15583 words)

  
 Hattic language - Slider
Hattic appears to be related to the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family.
The names "Hattic" and "Hittite" are modern terms, and both are apparently derived from the same word, the ancient name of the region where the two cultures flourished, which has been reconstructed as Hatti in the Hittite language.
The term "Hittite", taken from the Hebrew Bible, was first given in the early 20th century (rightly or wrongly) to the more recent culture and its Indo-European language; the names "Hattian" and "Hattic" were then coined decades late for the older culture and its non-Indo-European language.
enc.slider.com /Enc/Hattic_language   (193 words)

  
 Hattic_language LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Hattic was a language spoken in Asia Minor between the 3rd and the 2nd millennia BC.
The Nesians eventually absorbed or replaced the Hattic speakers (Hattians); but they retained the name Hatti for the region, and the use of Hattic for their religion.
The Hittite term for Hattic was hattili after the city of Hattus, whereas the Hittite dynasty called their own language nesili after their city of origin Kanesh.
language.school-explorer.com /info/Hattic_language   (392 words)

  
 GGVA - Linguistics
The Hattoid language family is comprised of a single line of languages that split from Abkhaz-Adhyghe starting at around 7000 BCE, as Indo-European was entering the area north of the Black Sea.
Thus, Proto-Vinca is to be defined as the state of the Hattic language as spoken between 7000 and 5000 BCE.
Hattic was a language spoken in Anatolia (modern day Turkey) during the second millenium BCE and is thought to have been there for quite some time even before that.
members.tripod.com /~glen_gordon/LANGUAGE/SINODENE/ABADHA/hattoid.html   (290 words)

  
 Language family information - Search.com
Language families can be divided into smaller phylogenetic units, conventionally referred to as branches of the family, because the history of a language family is often represented as a tree diagram.
The common ancestor of the languages belonging to a language family is known as its protolanguage.
Although deaf sign languages have emerged naturally in deaf communities alongside or among spoken languages, they are unrelated to spoken languages and have different grammatical structures at their core.
www.search.com /reference/Language_family   (1151 words)

  
 relationship between Hattic and Caucasian languages ?   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Urartian was the language of Urartu, = a powerful state centered in the area of Lake Van in Turkey, that = existed between 1000 BC or earlier to 585 BC.
Hattic was spoken in Anatolia (Turkey), in the area around ancient Hattusa (modern Boğazk?a=), until about 1800 BC, when it was replaced by the Indo-European Hittite language.
Urartian was the language of Urartu, a powerful state centered in the area of Lake Van in Turkey, that existed between 1000 BC or earlier to 585 BC.
www.forum-one.org /new-1979897-4338.html   (771 words)

  
 Hattic - Langmaker
Thus, as a kentum language spoken somewhere in the north of the former Soviet Union, Hattic can be positioned somewhere between Tocharian and Germanic.
It should be noted that Hattic has nothing in common with the ancient, non-IE language of the same name, spoken in Anatolia long ago.
My goal is to make a language that is both esthetically pleasing and as naturalistic as a language can be.
www.langmaker.com /db/Hattic   (341 words)

  
 Hattic - grammar
The first thing that caught my interest was the fact, that the Hattic language forms an entirely independent branch of the Indo-European language family, which ought to be sufficient to attract the attention of linguistic circles.
It is true that certain similarities cannot be denied, but the differences between the languages, both lexically and morphologically, are too huge to give credibility to the hypothesis of common roots with the Tocharians or their ancestors.
Typical for Hattic is the combination of two factors: the spirantization of Indo-European unaspirated alveolars, and a soundshift slightly reminiscent of the Germanic languages.
steen.free.fr /khadurian/hattic_grammar.html   (4351 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Abakwi - The language purportedly of the Ndake of the Mamberamo Basin of Irian Jaya, on the Island of New Guinea.
Senu Yivokuchi - the Language of the Bokuchi - Grammar, phonology, dictionary, and glossary of linguistic terms.
Short Grammar of the Hattic Language - Hattic is a member of a fictional Kentum branch of Indo-European, created by Jan van Steenbergen.
www.coolchat.com /search/od/?/Science/Social_Sciences/Linguistics/Languages/Constructed/Fictional   (1170 words)

  
 Opera Directory
Litaja is the official 2nd language for the Realm of Lykosha.
Hattic is a member of a fictional Kentum branch of Indo-European, created by Jan van Steenbergen.
Gevey is a language spoken in the continent Ewlah on planet Kallieda, by Rik Roots.
portal.opera.com /directory/?cat=253444   (820 words)

  
 Hittites - RecipeFacts   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The native term of the Hittite language was Nesili, the language of Nesa, the seat of the Hittite kings before the conquest of Hattusa.
The language of the Hattusa tablets was eventually deciphered by a Czech linguist, Bedřich Hrozný (1879–1952), who on 24 November 1915 announced his results in a lecture at the Near Eastern Society of Berlin.
For this reason, the language came to be known as the Hittite language, even though that was not what its speakers had called it.
www.recipeland.com:8080 /facts/Hittites   (1670 words)

  
 Hattic language - guideofcasinos.com   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Hattic is little known, but appears to be related to the Northwest Caucasian (Circassian) family.
The Hittite term for Hattic was hattili, whereas the Hittites called their own language nesili.
The form "Hittite" originally comes from biblical Heth, quite possibly connected to common Assyrian and Egyptian designations of "Land of the Hatti" (Khatti) west of the Euphrates.
www.guideofcasinos.com /Hattic_language.html   (141 words)

  
 The Dispatch - Serving the Lexington, NC - News   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The languages of the Caucasus are a large and extremely varied array of languages spoken by more than ten million people in the Caucasus region of Eastern Europe and Western Asia, between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.
Comparisons have been made to all the three language families, Northeast Caucasian, Northwest Caucasian and Kartvelian, the most elaborate being the Dene-Caucasian hypothesis of John D. Bengtson's, yet the suggested evidence is rejected by most linguists.
It has been speculated that the South Caucasian languages may be related to the extinct Iberian language, spoken until the 1st century BC in the Iberian peninsula (which is known as "Western Iberia" in the Caucasus, to distinguish it from the Caucasian Iberia).
www.the-dispatch.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Caucasian_languages   (874 words)

  
 BS Foundations chapter 1
Nineteenth century scholars associated the language with a morally superior "white race." -- one scholar identified their homeland as the Pripet marshes of Poland on account of the large number of Albinos he found living there.
Hattic gradually died out, and hence, in linguistic terms, the arrival of a Hittite-speaking dynasty may have helped to create a Hittite nation.
Greek culture was spread throughout the eastern Mediterranean and beyond, and by the end of the third century, Greek was the universal language of the west.
www.oglethorpe.edu /faculty/~b_smith/ou/bs_foundations_chapter1.htm   (17435 words)

  
 The Real Scythians of Messopotamia
The reason I even mention this is that it appears that the decoded words I have found in Scythian is often found in these languages also, as well as their late descendants in the Kartwelian Languages of the Caucasus.
We know relatively little of the early Scythian language, except that it came from ancient Anatolia and therefore it may be related to the languages of that region such as Hattic, Hurrian, Subarian.
Indeed if these are used as a guide much of the language of these "real Scythians" from 6century BC to the 2nd century BC can be decyphered, whereas they cannot be understood with the help of Iranian languages.
users.cwnet.com /millenia/scytha.html   (2147 words)

  
 Hittites
The language of the Hattusa tablets was eventually deciphered by a Czech linguist, Bedřich Hrozný (1879–1952), who on 24 November 1915 announced his results in a lecture at the Near Eastern Society of Berlin.
For this reason, the language came to be known as the Hittite language, even though that was not what its speakers had called it.
The Hittites themselves apparently called their language nešili "(in the manner) of (the city of) Neša" and hence it has been suggested that the more technically correct term, "Neshite", be used instead.
www.1bx.com /en/Hittites.htm   (2218 words)

  
 Saudi Aramco World : In Search of the Past: The Hittites of Anatolia   (Site not responding. Last check: )
But the language of the Boğazköy texts, as well as the identity of the people who wrote it, were a mystery.
Suspecting strongly that the Hittite language was of Indo-European origin, Hrozný identified the suffix -an as the accusative-case marker still preserved in Greek as -n.
Because we have few texts or other clues, this language, and the identity of its speakers, are still a matter of speculation, but we do know that the Hattic people, and the land of Hatti, became part of a new political entity known as the Hittite Old Kingdom in about 1650 BC.
www.saudiaramcoworld.com /issue/199405/in.search.of.the.past-the.hittites.of.anatolia.htm   (2601 words)

  
 Constructed - Search Engine   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Abakwi - The language purportedly of the Ndake of the Mamberamo Basin of Irian Jaya, on the Island of New Guinea.
Senu Yivokuchi - the Language of the Bokuchi - Grammar, phonology, dictionary, and glossary of linguistic terms.
Short Grammar of the Hattic Language - Hattic is a member of a fictional Kentum branch of Indo-European, created by Jan van Steenbergen.
b.domaindlx.com /workathome/cat.asp?/Science/Social_Sciences/Linguistics/Languages/Constructed/Fictional   (1120 words)

  
 Hittites - Art History Online Reference and Guide
The name "Hattic" is used by Anatolianists to distinguish this language from the Indo-European Hittite language, which appeared in the scene at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC and became the administrative language of the Hittite kingdom over the next six or seven centuries.
Since Hattic continued to be used in the Hittite kingdom for religious purposes, and there is substantial continuity between the two cultures, it is not known whether the Hattic speakers — the Hattians— were displaced by the speakers of Hittite, were absorbed by them, or just adopted their language.
The Hittite people thus vanished from the historical record, although their language and culture remained as late as the 5th century BC, and their legacy can be traced in several small independent states in central and southeastern Anatolia.
www.arthistoryclub.com /art_history/Hittites   (2303 words)

  
 LISTSERV 14.4
This is, of course, exactly what happens when one language moves into the territory of another whose speakers are at a higher level of technology and social organization.
The difficulties with Hittite were due to the form of _writing_, not to the language.
Once the writing forms were thoroughly understood, the language presented no particular difficulties and indeed bore out some predictions -- the famous laryngeals, for instance.
listserv.linguistlist.org /cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0002&L=indo-european&D=1&F=&S=&P=56323   (554 words)

  
 Science Fair Projects - Children of Eber
Along with their base in "Ur Kasidim" the names in this generation strongly indicate a north messopotamian homeland (a belief which was commonplace up until the twentieth century).
However attempts to point out non-Afroasiatic languages such as Hurrian language or Hattic language as the most likely languages for the generations upto this point are frowned upon.
This is because such statements fly in the face of the beliefs of many that the Israelites preserved the perfect form of the same language "spoken in Eden" (!).
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Children_of_Eber   (613 words)

  
 GGVA - Linguistics
All Hattic variations found in ancient texts are placed in bold under the English translation on the right-hand side for clarity.
The letter "z" was pronounced like "ts" and instances of "f" may be pronounced by placing one's lips close together and blowing out (a "bilabial fricative").
Hattic god of Tamarmara, perhaps a god of the sun
members.tripod.com /~glen_gordon/LANGUAGE/SINODENE/ABADHA/hattic_glossary.html   (265 words)

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