Following an initiative to include Japanese and Korean into the Altaic macro-family by Philipp von Siebold (1832) and a systematic linguistics-oriented investigation in the late 19th and the early 20th centuries by Gustav John Ramstedt (1952, 1957, 1966), the question whether the Altaic macro-family is a genealogical unity (Miller 1971; Menges 1984; Robbeets 2005) or just a group of languages that share similar typology (Janhunen 2007; Vovin 2009; Tranter 2012) is still disputed. On the other hand, the existence of a common ancestor between Japanese and Korean has recently gained more supporting linguistic evidence (Whitman 1985; Francis-Ratte 2016), although a large group of proposed Proto-Japanese-Korean lexical items are not completely u...
The hypothesis that Japanese and Korean share a common linguistic origin remains highly controversia...
This paper analyses the foundations of the comparative-reconstructive method and tries to demonstrat...
This paper concerns the odd absence of Japanese-like words in areas of ancient Korea where pre-Japan...
Following an initiative to include Japanese and Korean into the Altaic macro-family by Philipp von S...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
The present study measures the resemblances of Japanese with Altaic languages (Turkic; Tungstic; Mon...
Little authentic documentation is available on the origin of the Korean language. Thus, inferences t...
Little authentic documentation is available on the origin of the Korean language. Thus, inferences t...
The present study measures the resemblances of Japanese with Altaic languages (Turkic; Tungstic; Mon...
In exploring the origins of the Korean language, there are three windows through which we may penet...
In popular conception, Altaic is often assumed to constitute a language family, or perhaps a phylum,...
The hypothesis of an Altaic language family, comprising the Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Korean and, ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2003.Mode of access: World Wide Web.Includes bibliog...
The hypothesis that Japanese and Korean share a common linguistic origin remains highly controversia...
The hypothesis that Japanese and Korean share a common linguistic origin remains highly controversia...
This paper analyses the foundations of the comparative-reconstructive method and tries to demonstrat...
This paper concerns the odd absence of Japanese-like words in areas of ancient Korea where pre-Japan...
Following an initiative to include Japanese and Korean into the Altaic macro-family by Philipp von S...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
This article discusses 40 grammatical features in Japonic and Koreanic in relation to their neighbou...
The present study measures the resemblances of Japanese with Altaic languages (Turkic; Tungstic; Mon...
Little authentic documentation is available on the origin of the Korean language. Thus, inferences t...
Little authentic documentation is available on the origin of the Korean language. Thus, inferences t...
The present study measures the resemblances of Japanese with Altaic languages (Turkic; Tungstic; Mon...
In exploring the origins of the Korean language, there are three windows through which we may penet...
In popular conception, Altaic is often assumed to constitute a language family, or perhaps a phylum,...
The hypothesis of an Altaic language family, comprising the Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Korean and, ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2003.Mode of access: World Wide Web.Includes bibliog...
The hypothesis that Japanese and Korean share a common linguistic origin remains highly controversia...
The hypothesis that Japanese and Korean share a common linguistic origin remains highly controversia...
This paper analyses the foundations of the comparative-reconstructive method and tries to demonstrat...
This paper concerns the odd absence of Japanese-like words in areas of ancient Korea where pre-Japan...