The first article proposes a new name for the Southern Khoisan family, based on the fact that all sufficiently attested languages show some reflex of the noun *tuu 'people'. This is a more suitable alternative to previous terms, because it not only unambiguously identifies the genealogical unit and is in line with established conventions for classificatory nomenclature, but also avoids several drawbacks of other terms, among them the heretofore unproven idea of a genealogical unit Khoisan. The second article gives more substantial and systematic evidence that Tuu alias Southern Khoisan itself is in fact a coherent genealogical entity. It first outlines basic structural features of Tuu languages showing that they constitute a robust and typo...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
This is supplementary material for the article Nakagawa, Hirosi, Alena Witzlack-Makarevich, Daniel A...
Recent genetic studies of living African peoples have suggested that the KhoiSan in particular are o...
The first article proposes a new name for the Southern Khoisan family, based on the fact that all su...
In historical times, the wider Cape region including the Orange river area hosted languages of two v...
Peoples speaking so-called Khoisan languages—that is, indigenous languages of southern Africa that d...
The paper discusses the author�s comparative investigation of Khmuic in progress. Original proposals...
The article analyzes the relation between Aweti and Kamayurá on different levels. Both languages bel...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 357-373).The study demonstrates for th...
In this paper we present a new, lexicon-based phylogeny of 34 Southern Bantu languages, and combine ...
This study was intended to explore the genetic relationship between Tulambatu and Tolaki languages a...
In this paper we present a new, lexicon-based phylogeny of 34 Southern Bantu languages, and combine ...
The Siouan family comprises some twenty languages, historically spoken across a broad swath of the c...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
This is supplementary material for the article Nakagawa, Hirosi, Alena Witzlack-Makarevich, Daniel A...
Recent genetic studies of living African peoples have suggested that the KhoiSan in particular are o...
The first article proposes a new name for the Southern Khoisan family, based on the fact that all su...
In historical times, the wider Cape region including the Orange river area hosted languages of two v...
Peoples speaking so-called Khoisan languages—that is, indigenous languages of southern Africa that d...
The paper discusses the author�s comparative investigation of Khmuic in progress. Original proposals...
The article analyzes the relation between Aweti and Kamayurá on different levels. Both languages bel...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 357-373).The study demonstrates for th...
In this paper we present a new, lexicon-based phylogeny of 34 Southern Bantu languages, and combine ...
This study was intended to explore the genetic relationship between Tulambatu and Tolaki languages a...
In this paper we present a new, lexicon-based phylogeny of 34 Southern Bantu languages, and combine ...
The Siouan family comprises some twenty languages, historically spoken across a broad swath of the c...
Abstract Ever since Paul K. Benedict (1942, 1975) had first set out the case for Austro-Tai in deta...
This is supplementary material for the article Nakagawa, Hirosi, Alena Witzlack-Makarevich, Daniel A...
Recent genetic studies of living African peoples have suggested that the KhoiSan in particular are o...