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I dont think sounds can be used to classify a language in a group but yes you may be right as as long as no other indo-european language has them which most likely is also the case
Although the voiced, semi-voiced and voiceless do not ALL appear in any other Indo-European language I've researched, I'm pretty confident with a guess that the Caucasian language group had influenced them anyway back in the day of the Proto-Indo-European homeland, which is generally believed to have been adjacent to the Caucasian homeland (regardless of whether you believe the PIE homeland was on the Pontic Steppe or the Armenian Plateau).
There are loan words which were known to be exchanged between the two language groups, although more of them apparently came from the Indo-Europeans.
And I'm not stating that the Armenian language belongs in the Caucasian language group, I'm just stating that it's not wise to deny that they have anything in common.
there was an AD atthe bottom of the page with some indians and it said when
it comes to choosing the perfect match for our daughter I was someone I can trust LOL !
there was an AD atthe bottom of the page with some indians and it said when
it comes to choosing the perfect match for our daughter I was someone I can trust LOL !
Although the voiced, semi-voiced and voiceless do not ALL appear in any other Indo-European language I've researched, I'm pretty confident with a guess that the Caucasian language group had influenced them anyway back in the day of the Proto-Indo-European homeland, which is generally believed to have been adjacent to the Caucasian homeland (regardless of whether you believe the PIE homeland was on the Pontic Steppe or the Armenian Plateau).
There are loan words which were known to be exchanged between the two language groups, although more of them apparently came from the Indo-Europeans.
And I'm not stating that the Armenian language belongs in the Caucasian language group, I'm just stating that it's not wise to deny that they have anything in common.
granted, what I should have said is that it has much more in common with the Indo-Europan group than the caucasian group which anyhow does not make one of the other more european anyways
yeah, Armenian has a lot in common with its sister languages (Indo-European languages), yet it has its highly eccentric reflexes that aren't reflected anywhere else (The "Erk" reflex anyone? The Reflex that made PIE "do" [two] evolve to become "Erkoo", and Armenian Erkan [long] stem out from Greek "Duouan" [or something in that vein]).
Let's put the issue this way, "white" is slang for Caucasian.
Yes I understand the slang, but, still? Does that really mean anything? I say no.
I care about preservation of culture and language... People have been harmed thru history based on those... race is ________________________________
__________________________________________________ _________________
I will later demonstrate that 'capitalism' and 'racism' go hand in hand... can't have starbucks without cottinpickin slaves...
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