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1-10 of 14 matches of 32810 nodes total

Match 1
ID a & Name b 00-DAA-abb Sei
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 43
LSName h sei
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l sehyi ⊕ Seingbein
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Liberia
Match 2
ID a & Name b 00-DAA-abc Gbein
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 43
LSName h gbein
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l ⊕ Taye>S.
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Liberia
Match 3
ID a & Name b 00-DAA-abe Bein
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 43
LSName h bein
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l bain ⊕ Gaapa
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Liberia
Match 4
ID a & Name b 45-B Ezo + Kurile
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 354
LSName h EZO + KURILE
LSType i set
IsNotional k no
Notes l AYNU, ainu # aynu=«person, human bein
Statistics
1 Chain • 1 Net • 4 OuterLanguages • 9 InnerLanguages • 21 Dialects
Relatives
ISO-639 A 1 ISO-639-2-Language-ain Ainu
Match 5
ID a & Name b 50-AAA-acd Beinn-Na-Faoghla
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 386
LSName h beinn-na-faoghla
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l benbecula ⊕ Beinn-na-Faoghla, Benbecula island
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 United Kingdom
Match 6
ID a & Name b 50-ABA-aba Cymraeg-Y-Beibl
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 387
LSName h cymraeg-y-beibl
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l "bible welsh", including cymraeg-y-pulpud, "conservative pulpit welsh" 𝒮 from 1588 (first translation of Welsh Bible); now being submerged < Modern Literary Welsh
Script n Welsh
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 United Kingdom
Match 7
ID a & Name b 50-ABA-add Gwenhwyseg
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 388
LSName h gwenhwyseg
LSType i dialect
IsNotional k no
Notes l cymraeg-y-de-ddwyrain, "traditional welsh"-SE., "traditional cymric"-SE., (obsolete) "gwentian". "silurian" ⊕ last vestiges in Rhondda... Wysg, Usk valleys ➤ following the near-extinction of this idiom, standard Welsh (Cymraeg-safonol) is being reintroduced in the late 20th century through Welsh-medium schools
Scale o 2*
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 United Kingdom
Match 8
ID a & Name b 52-ACB-hm Wolga-Deutsch
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 439
LSName h wolga-deutsch
LSType i inner language
IsNotional k no
Notes l bilingual < [53=] Russkiy ¶ migration, mainly from West Central Germany, to the Volga in 1764-67, at the initiative of Catherine the Great, with many descendants migrating again to Argentina and Brazil (and elsewhere in the Americas) from 1880. Speakers remaining on the Volga occupied the former Republic of the Russian Germans (Republik der Wolgadeutschen) until the Second World War, being largely dispersed in and after 1945
Scale o 5
Statistics
2 Dialects
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Russia | Argentina
Match 9
ID a & Name b 65-AA Ute + Shoshoni
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 492
LSName h UTE + SHOSHONI
LSType i chain
IsNotional k no
Notes l NUMIC, "numanic", "wider" ute, "shoshonean" bilingual < [52=] English (USA) ¶ far-ranging hunter-gatherer shamanistic communities, frequently intermarrying, and sometimes becoming equestrian nomads after acquistion of the horse from [51=] Spanish-speaking settlers in early 18th cent. ➤ a network of closely inter-related nomadic idioms formerly covering a wide area from the Sierra Nevada northwards & eastwards across the Great Basin # "numic, numanic" <numa, numu =«people, human beings»; the names ute and/or pai-ute have been associated with communities and their idioms in each of the 3 nets within this chain.
Statistics
3 Nets • 6 OuterLanguages • 24 InnerLanguages • 19 Dialects • 3 ISO-639-Relatives
Match 10
ID a & Name b 65-AH Jano + Guamar
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 496
LSName h JANO + GUAMAR
LSType i chain
IsNotional k yes
Notes l SOUTHERN-PERIPHERY-EAST notional classification (of a geographic sequence of extinct and largely unrecorded languages in north central Mexico and adjacent USA, at least some of which were probably Uto-Aztecan) ➤ for purposes of reference, and to help complete the picture of North America's extreme linguistic complexity prior to ethnic clearance, these languages have been treated below as successive components - from north to south – of a notional chain, forming a geographic (and possible linguistic) link between the 2 previous chains. The following represent only the principal or best known communities among several hundreds named in this area by early European invaders, prior to their being destroyed, dispersed or linguistically submerged < [51=] Español and/or [52=] English ¶ spoken principally by nomadic hunter-gatherer bands
Statistics
10 Nets • 11 OuterLanguages • 15 InnerLanguages

1-10 of 14 matches of 32810 nodes total

Requested by 18.221.145.52 at 2024-04-26 06:50:44 Europe/Berlin.

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