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Indo-European

  (ĭn'dō-yʊr'ə-pē'ən) pronunciation
n.
    1. A family of languages consisting of most of the languages of Europe as well as those of Iran, the Indian subcontinent, and other parts of Asia.
    2. Proto-Indo-European. Also called Indo-Germanic.
  1. A member of any of the peoples speaking an Indo-European language.
IndoEuropean In'do-Eu'ro·pe'an adj.
 
 

Indo-European, the term used to refer to the family of languages which were originally spoken throughout much of Eurasia west of the Urals and also in the Indian subcontinent, with an outlying branch in Chinese Turkestan. The language from which all these languages are descended, called proto-Indo-European, can be reconstructed by historical and comparative linguistics. It was probably spoken in the Pontic-Caspian region of southern Russia in about 3000 BC. The earliest attested subgroups of the Indo-European language family are Anatolian, Hellenic, Indic, and Iranian. The other major subgroups are: Celtic, Italic, Germanic, Baltic, Slavonic, Albanian, Armenian, and Tocharian.

 
Archaeology Dictionary: Indo-European

[De]

Term applied to a large group of cognate languages, including the majority of European language groups—Italic, Germanic, Celtic, Baltic, Slavonic, and Greek—as well as Indo-Iranian (Persian and Hindi) and Sanskrit. Many attempts have been made to model and explain the dispersal of Indo-European languages, a problem fraught with difficulties because of having to correlate linguistic groups with material culture, ethnic communities, and cultural groups. Following earlier work by Gordon Childe and others, Marija Gimbutas has articulated and elaborated the long-held traditional view which situates the homeland of a proto-Indo-European language in the Euro-Asiatic steppe of south Russia and western Asia. From here it spread into Europe with the single-grave, corded ware, and globular amphorae groups during the 2nd millennium bc. A similar argument was elaborated still further by Jim Mallory in 1989, confirming the area north of the Black Sea as the Indo-European homeland and seeking its spread around 4000 bc, late in the Neolithic or early Copper Age of the region. However, the precise origins, timing, and social context of the language spread has been disputed by Colin Renfrew who forcefully argues for an origin in Anatolia and northern Greece and a much earlier spread, starting in the 7th millennium bc, linked to the dispersal of farming technologies and the classic Neolithic lifestyle.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Indo-European,
family of languages having more speakers than any other language family. It is estimated that approximately half the world's population speaks an Indo-European tongue as a first language. The Indo-European family is so named because at one time its individual members were prevalent mainly in an area between and including India and Europe, although not all languages spoken in this region were Indo-European. Today, however, the Indo-European languages have spread to every continent and a number of islands. It should be stressed that the term Indo-European describes language only and is not used scientifically in an ethnic or cultural sense. The languages classified as Indo-European are sufficiently similar to form one major linguistic division.

The characteristics Indo-European languages share with respect to vocabulary and grammar have led many scholars to postulate that they are all descended from an original parent language, called Proto-Indo-European, which is believed to have been spoken some time before 4000 B.C., perhaps before 8000 B.C. or earlier. Since there are no written records of Proto-Indo-European, it apparently was in use before writing was known to its speakers. Even its existence is an assumption, although a plausible one and the only really satisfactory explanation of the common features of the modern Indo-European languages. There has been much speculation as to the region where the speakers of Proto-Indo-European first lived and the nature of their culture, but nothing definite is known. One theory of the origin of the individual Indo-European languages suggests that as the ancient speakers of Proto-Indo-European migrated or moved away from each other, losing contact, their language broke up into a number of tongues. These tongues later also split up still further, eventually giving rise to the many modern Indo-European languages. For a classification of Indo-European subfamilies, groups, subgroups, and individual languages, see the table entitled The Indo-European Family of Languages. By studying the vocabulary and grammar of the various daughter languages of which there are records, scholars have tried to reconstruct Proto-Indo-European and infer some of its characteristics. It appears to have been highly inflected in a distinctive way. Apparently, it also had three genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter) for nouns, pronouns, and adjectives; eight cases for the noun; agreement between adjectives and nouns; and a free accent (i.e., one that could be placed on any syllable).

The descendant languages have all tended to discard to a greater or lesser extent these features of the mother tongue and to become simplified. For example, they substitute increasingly the use of word order and prepositions for inflections to indicate the relationships of words in a sentence. There also exists among the Indo-European languages a similarity of basic words (such as words denoting kinship, numerals, and parts of the body) that points to a common origin. Different forms of writing for the various Indo-European languages used both in ancient and modern times include cuneiform, hieroglyphics, and a number of alphabets, among them the Devanagari, Greek, Roman, and Arabic scripts.

See articles on many of the Indo-European subfamilies, groups, and languages.

Bibliography

See also E. Benveniste, Indo-European Language and Society (tr. 1973); P. Baldi, An Introduction to the Indo-European Languages (1983).


 
Translations: Indo-European

Dansk (Danish)
adj. - indo-europæisk
n. - indo-europæer

Nederlands (Dutch)
Indo-Europees, Indo-Europeaan

Français (French)
adj. - indo-européen
n. - Indo-européen

Deutsch (German)
adj. - indoeuropäisch, indogermanisch
n. - (Ling.) Indogermanisch

Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. - ινδοευρωπαϊκός
n. - Ινδοευρωπαίος

Italiano (Italian)
indoeuropeo

Português (Portuguese)
adj., -
n. - indo-europeu (m)

Русский (Russian)
индоевропейский, индоевропеец

Español (Spanish)
adj. - indoeuropeo
n. - indoeuropeo

Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - indoeuropeisk
n. - indoeuropé

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
印欧语系的, 印欧语系

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
adj. - 印歐語系的
n. - 印歐語系

한국어 (Korean)
adj. - 인도유럽어족의
n. - 인도유럽어족

日本語 (Japanese)
adj. - 印欧基語の, インドヨーロッパ語族の
n. - 印欧基語

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(صفه) هندي أوروبي (الاسم) الهندي الأوروبي‏

עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - ‮הודו- אירופית (שפה), של השפה ההודו-אירופית המקורית‬
n. - ‮משפחת השפות ההודו-אירופיות, השפה ההודו-אירופית המקורית המשוערת, דובר שפה הודו-אירופית‬


 
 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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