In an article of mine appeared in this journal (Vol. 1, N o. 2) stress was laid upon the fact that Mongolian, Manchurian, Korean and Japanese are four main branches of the Altaic tongue. This artic1e deals with the speech sounds of these dialects in order to throw some light upon the forces that lie deep down and cause those sounds to move and change without cease
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
The article deals with the main principles according to which Mongolian sounds are rendered into Chi...
This article consists of free parts. In the first one is a bibliographical survey of the most import...
THE HISTORICAL PHONOLOGY OF MANCHU DIALECTS Andrew Jonathan Joseph, Ph. D. Cornell University 2018 T...
The hypothesis of an Altaic language family, comprising the Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Korean and, ...
This dissertation presents a study of the vowel phonology of the Manchu-Tungus languages of China--M...
Language contact between the Han and non-Han languages of China have often been assumed to be unidir...
This dissertation investigates the synchrony and diachrony of the vocalism of a variety of Northeast...
The much-mooted hypothesis, original with Ramstedt (1912) and later refined by Poppe (1960), to the ...
Although the Mongolic language group consists of ten rather closely related languages, there is no c...
Following an initiative to include Japanese and Korean into the Altaic macro-family by Philipp von S...
the Altaic language family • About 7.000 native speakers (census 2002) – an overstated number • Dia...
This article introduces the current research status in Altaic languages in the last two decades, pay...
The purpose of this study is to present some aspects of the sound system of Gān’gōu Chinese, a North...
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
The article deals with the main principles according to which Mongolian sounds are rendered into Chi...
This article consists of free parts. In the first one is a bibliographical survey of the most import...
THE HISTORICAL PHONOLOGY OF MANCHU DIALECTS Andrew Jonathan Joseph, Ph. D. Cornell University 2018 T...
The hypothesis of an Altaic language family, comprising the Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Korean and, ...
This dissertation presents a study of the vowel phonology of the Manchu-Tungus languages of China--M...
Language contact between the Han and non-Han languages of China have often been assumed to be unidir...
This dissertation investigates the synchrony and diachrony of the vocalism of a variety of Northeast...
The much-mooted hypothesis, original with Ramstedt (1912) and later refined by Poppe (1960), to the ...
Although the Mongolic language group consists of ten rather closely related languages, there is no c...
Following an initiative to include Japanese and Korean into the Altaic macro-family by Philipp von S...
the Altaic language family • About 7.000 native speakers (census 2002) – an overstated number • Dia...
This article introduces the current research status in Altaic languages in the last two decades, pay...
The purpose of this study is to present some aspects of the sound system of Gān’gōu Chinese, a North...
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
The article deals with the main principles according to which Mongolian sounds are rendered into Chi...