Want this question answered?
Agricultural or Anatolia. and Conquest or Kurgan.. I just did an essay on those two so i hope that helps(:
Linguists have reconstructed the parent language and call it Proto-Indo-European (PIE). This reconstruction is very detailed. It is believed that PIE was spoken prior to 3700 BCE, possibly in the Pontic-Caspian steppe of Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
Linguists refer to the first language ever spoken as Proto-World, but it was spoken long before 6000BCE. It is also called Proto-Sapiens, and Proto-Human. The current theory states it was spoken between 100,000 and 200,000 years ago.
Proto-Indo-European is a hypothetical language, it is not a race of people. It was spoken by a group of people in approximately 4000 BC, and we have no way of knowing what color they were. As the language spread widely over Europe and Asia it was spoken by more and more people. Race is not even a recognizable category in a scientific sense but the Indo-European languages are now spoken by the people of India (as Hindu and many other dialects of northern India), people of Afghanistan and Persian, people of Scandinavia and the rest of northern Europe and the whole of southern Europe. For more information seehttp://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2474370/protoindoeuropean_religion.html?cat=37
"Aryans" as a term designating a specific group of languages also referred to as Indo-Iranian languages has fallen out of favor. However, the written language developed by Proto-Indo-Iranians is called Sanskrit, the oldest language of that branch of Indo-European languages.
It is generally assumed that the Proto-Indo-European language originated in the Pontic-Caspian steppe region, which encompasses present-day Ukraine and southern Russia. This area is believed to be the homeland from where the early Indo-European speaking populations migrated and spread their language and culture.
Indo-European is believed to have originated from a hypothetical ancestral language called Proto-Indo-European, which is thought to have been spoken thousands of years ago on the Eurasian Steppe.
There is no Proto-Indo-European language group. Proto-Indo-European, or PIE, is the hypothetical root language from which Indo-European languages today (and others that are extinct) descend.
Proto-Indo-European languages are believed to have originated on the Pontic-Caspian steppe region, which covers parts of modern-day Ukraine and Russia. This location is known as the "homeland" or "Urheimat" of the Proto-Indo-Europeans based on linguistic and archaeological evidence. From this region, the Proto-Indo-European language spread and diversified into the various Indo-European languages we have today.
The Indo-European language is thought to have originated out of the Pontic-Caspian steppe region, which encompasses parts of Eastern Europe and Western Asia. This region is often referred to as the homeland of the Proto-Indo-Europeans, the linguistic ancestors of the various Indo-European language groups spoken today.
No, but it is an area of research within linguistics. The reconstructed Language is called Proto-Human or Proto-World.
Linguists have reconstructed the parent language and call it Proto-Indo-European (PIE). This reconstruction is very detailed. It is believed that PIE was spoken prior to 3700 BCE, possibly in the Pontic-Caspian steppe of Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
The word ethnic came to the Scottishlanguage from the English language in the 14th century. However, it originated with the PIE (Proto-Indo-European language) base *swedh-no- suffix.See the related link listed below for more information:
The word "house" originated from the Old English word "hus," which in turn came from the Proto-Germanic word "husan." Its roots can be traced back to the Proto-Indo-European word "keus," meaning "to move away from home."
The Proto- Indo- European language and the Nostratic language were studied using the deep reconstruction technique.
Hawaiian and Native American languages.
German language belongs to the West Germanic group of the Germanic languages, which in turn is a branch of the larger Indo-European language family. Its origins can be traced back to Proto-Germanic, which developed from the earlier Proto-Indo-European language spoken thousands of years ago.