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There is a page named "Indo-Hittite" on Wikipedia

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  • In Indo-European linguistics, the term Indo-Hittite (also Indo-Anatolian) refers to Edgar Howard Sturtevant's 1926 hypothesis that the Anatolian languages...
    12 KB (1,287 words) - 11:24, 30 January 2025
  • Thumbnail for Hittite language
    BC, making it the earliest attested use of the Indo-European languages. By the Late Bronze Age, Hittite had started losing ground to its close relative...
    41 KB (3,595 words) - 09:37, 13 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Hittites
    boxes, or other symbols instead of cuneiform script. The Hittites (/ˈhɪtaɪts/) were an Anatolian Indo-European people who formed one of the first major civilizations...
    108 KB (12,389 words) - 00:21, 27 February 2025
  • Anatolian languages (category Articles containing Hittite-language text)
    of Indo-European languages that were spoken in Anatolia. The best known Anatolian language is Hittite, which is considered the earliest-attested Indo-European...
    45 KB (4,916 words) - 07:13, 2 March 2025
  • Thumbnail for Proto-Indo-European homeland
    the Armenian hypothesis, which situates the homeland for archaic PIE ('Indo-Hittite') south of the Caucasus mountains. A third contender is the Anatolian...
    120 KB (14,092 words) - 15:53, 20 February 2025
  • Old Indo-Aryan, Old Iranian, Old Latin and Hittite, while traces of it can be found in the enclitic personal pronouns of the Tocharian languages. Indo-European...
    66 KB (6,015 words) - 09:50, 26 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Indo-European languages
    Written evidence of Indo-European appeared during the Bronze Age in the form of Mycenaean Greek and the Anatolian languages of Hittite and Luwian. The oldest...
    113 KB (10,314 words) - 02:34, 4 March 2025
  • emigrated before Indo-Europeans had learned to use chariots for war. Comparison of Hittite agricultural terms with those of other Indo-European subgroups...
    11 KB (1,100 words) - 05:02, 9 December 2024
  • relationship to the other Indo-European languages, by studying its orthography and by comparing loanwords from nearby languages. Hittite had two series of consonants...
    19 KB (2,287 words) - 07:23, 3 January 2025
  • Thumbnail for Indo-European migrations
    and the other Indo-European languages came from, called Proto-Indo-Hittite. Although PIE logically had predecessors, the Indo-Hittite hypothesis is not...
    268 KB (29,556 words) - 17:21, 21 February 2025
  • Similarly, Indo-Europees has now largely replaced the still occasionally encountered Indogermaans in Dutch scientific literature. Indo-Hittite is sometimes...
    41 KB (3,965 words) - 02:43, 23 January 2025
  • Thumbnail for Luwian language
    of Anatolian, alongside Hittite and Palaic. As Luwian has numerous archaisms, it is regarded as important to the study of Indo-European languages (IE)...
    50 KB (5,797 words) - 04:00, 7 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Mitanni
    Mitanni (redirect from Mitanni Indo-Aryan)
    Pisaniello, V. (2023), "Indo-Aryans in the Ancient Near East", Contacts of Languages and Peoples in the Hittite and Post-Hittite World, Brill, pp. 332–345...
    87 KB (11,140 words) - 19:09, 1 March 2025
  • millennium BC, descendants of the Proto-Indo-Europeans had reached far and wide across Eurasia, including Anatolia (Hittites), the Aegean (the linguistic ancestors...
    54 KB (6,411 words) - 00:33, 25 February 2025
  • pastoralists. It also lends support to the Indo-Hittite hypothesis, according to which both proto-Anatolian and proto-Indo-European split off from a common mother...
    24 KB (2,795 words) - 15:59, 29 June 2024
  • Proto-Anatolian language (category Indo-European languages)
    proto-language from which the ancient Anatolian languages emerged (i.e. Hittite and its closest relatives). As with almost all other proto-languages, no...
    11 KB (1,296 words) - 03:53, 7 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Uriah the Hittite
    Uriah the Hittite (Hebrew: אוּרִיָּה הַחִתִּי‎ ʾŪrīyyā haḤīttī) is a minor figure in the Hebrew Bible, mentioned in the Books of Samuel, an elite soldier...
    11 KB (1,616 words) - 21:27, 29 January 2025
  • Veronika (2019). "MUNUS/Fduttarii̯ata/I- and Some Other Indo-European Maidens". Hrozný and Hittite. pp. 277–294. doi:10.1163/9789004413122_015. ISBN 978-90-04-41312-2...
    346 KB (9,206 words) - 09:21, 25 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Proto-Indo-European mythology
    Baltic, Roman, Norse, Celtic, Greek, Slavic, Hittite, Armenian, and Albanian. The mythology of the Proto-Indo-Europeans is not directly attested and it is...
    141 KB (17,188 words) - 23:10, 26 February 2025
  • Thumbnail for Indo-Aryan peoples
    Indo-Aryan peoples are a diverse collection of peoples predominantly found in South Asia, who (traditionally) speak Indo-Aryan languages. Historically...
    20 KB (1,597 words) - 11:34, 25 February 2025
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