Tuesday, 14 January 2014

Language Family

Language Family



1.Language family - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Description:A language family is a group of languages related through
descent from a common ancestor, called the proto-language of that family.
The term 'family' comes from the ...



2.List of language families - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Description:This List of language families includes also language
isolates, unclassified languages and other types of languages.



3.KryssTal : Language Families

Description:An introduction to Language Families. The Indo-European,
Uralic, Altaic, Dravidian, Sino-Tibetan, Malayo-Polynesian, Niger-Congo
are the main families discussed.



4.THE LANGUAGE FAMILIES OF THE WORLD

Description:The Niger-Kordofanian Family. The largest sub-Saharan African
family of languages, it includes some 1,000 languages with close to 200
million speakers.



5.language family - definition and examples of language families

Description:A language family is a set of languages deriving from a common
ancestor or



6.Language family | Define Language family at Dictionary.com

Description:Main Entry: language family Part of Speech: n Definition: any
group of languages that derive from a common ancestor



7.Browse by Language Family | Ethnologue

Description:This web edition of the Ethnologue may be cited as: Lewis, M.
Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig (eds.). 2013. Ethnologue:
Languages of the World ...



8.Ancient Scripts: Language Families

Description:Language Families: Indo-European. The most well known of all
language families is the Indo-European, which comprises roughly 12 major
groups and hundreds of languages.



9.Language Families | About World Languages

Description:Most languages belong to language families. A language family
is a group of related languages that developed from a common historic
ancestor, referred to as ...



10.Summary by language family | Ethnologue

Description:Statistical summary of the distribution of world languages and
their populations within the six largest language families.

No comments:

Post a Comment