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- ...Roman Empire. The Estric language had already been in decline, replaced by Celtic and Germanic languages afterwards with Noroeic becoming excinct a few centu ...es. A prominent feature of most Alpian vowels is ablaut: a vowel in a word stem turns into different vowel under a certain environment. ...5 KB (778 words) - 11:36, 30 August 2018
- Sangi, like most of the Celtic languages, has a series of initial consonant mutations which change the sou I-affection occurs when the last consonant of the stem is immediately followed by the vowels i and e (long, short and diphthong fo ...7 KB (1,192 words) - 05:18, 22 August 2013
- ...family, loosely inspired by Icelandic, Greenlandic, Old Persian and Proto-Celtic. Before the era of Hivantish literature, a specially constructed language r The demonstrative is ''innur'', cognate with the Proto-Celtic *sindos. ...7 KB (948 words) - 16:40, 21 January 2024
- ...in Austro-Germania. It was formed as a ''lingua franca'' between the many Celtic towns that mixed their own tribal languages with Latin. !!! o-stem !! pl !! i-stem !! pl !! u-stem !! pl ...6 KB (805 words) - 22:47, 12 June 2025
- ...th other ancient Indo-European languages, nouns belonged to one of several stem classes. All o-stem nouns are either masculine or neuter. ...9 KB (1,147 words) - 18:44, 21 September 2024
- '''Carrick''' (Ck. ''Kærthío'' /ˈkærðiˑo/) is a Brittonic Celtic language spoken by the mountain-dwelling Carthi (Ck. ''Kærthi'') on the arc ...ive, accusative, genitive, dative) in the singular and plural. There are 8 stem classes (a-, o-, u-, i-, Ø-, s-, n-, r-), within which are a number of sub- ...15 KB (2,072 words) - 17:47, 2 July 2024
- |fam2 = [[w:Celtic languages|Celtic]] ...goe UI',sans-serif">Λῦτικη, Литике [[IPA for Oltic|[ɫîtike]]]</span>) is a Celtic language spoken by the intersection of the rivers Olt and Danube. ...28 KB (2,897 words) - 01:24, 30 September 2025
- ...istinction between “long-stem” and “short-stem” roots) in the neuter of ja-stem nouns and adjectives. This distinction was retained in the masculine in Got * In the Gaulish or Proto-Celtic borrowing ''ambaxtos'' (‘minister, servant’), Gothic shows a reanalysis of ...14 KB (2,148 words) - 15:33, 17 March 2022
- ...t has a more fusional morphology: both nouns and verbs are inflected using stem changes (Sami-style consonant gradation, umlaut and creaky voice ablaut) in I was getting bored of standard-fare Semitic and Celtic aesthetics, so I decided to try out a much more (mainly Northern and Skolt) ...13 KB (1,954 words) - 06:21, 9 May 2023
- ..., but the root itself is one and the same as [[:wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Celtic/anderā|*anderā]] ("woman") and, thus, likely Pre-Annerish. ...e shared with the Annerish language, which had previously been regarded as Celtic. True classification has also been obscured by the crucial lack of [[:w:Ver ...19 KB (2,926 words) - 17:26, 26 May 2025
- ...[[:w:Germanic languages|Germanic]], is influenced by [[:w:Celtic languages|Celtic]] (more commonly by [[:w:Goidelic languages|Goidelic]]), [[:w:North Germani ...n-declension are then divided into the 3 categories of a-stem, u-stem, & i-stem. ...15 KB (2,191 words) - 13:29, 5 May 2021
- ...here identical forms recurred in a single class or where iotisation led to stem-changes. ===Proto-Celtic to Common Brittonic (to 1st Century AD)=== ...23 KB (3,095 words) - 16:07, 17 April 2021
- ...Avishviya]] (''Awiſſwigá''), inspired by Czech, Sanskrit, Greek, and Proto-Celtic. It shares satemization and the ruki law with Indo-Iranian and Balto-Slavic ...t. For example, ''vrýž'' 'king' (from *h₃rḗǵs) declines as a regular ''i''-stem masculine noun. ...23 KB (3,363 words) - 01:37, 9 June 2024
- ...might have evolved if Latin had displaced the native [[w:Celtic languages|Celtic]] language as the spoken language of the people in Great Britain. ...Brithenig and Welsh is that while Welsh is [[w:Gallo-Brittonic languages|P-Celtic]], Latin was a [[w:Osco-Umbrian_languages#Differences_from_Latin|Q-Italic l ...52 KB (8,109 words) - 15:02, 15 October 2021
- |fam2= [[Celtic languages|Celtic]] |fam3= [[Insular Celtic]] ...68 KB (10,192 words) - 15:43, 19 January 2026
- |fam2= [[Celtic languages|Celtic]] |fam3= [[Insular Celtic]] ...81 KB (11,925 words) - 10:52, 24 October 2024
- ...es, Proto-Valtamic would have been in contact with languages such as Proto-Celtic, Proto-Germanic, Proto-Baltic, Proto-Slavic, and even Proto-Finnic, which i | < PC ''[[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Celtic/yextis|*yextis]]'' ...42 KB (5,918 words) - 16:01, 8 May 2025
- * soicheall = common sense; intelligence (Irish reflex of hypothetical Proto-Celtic **sukʷēslā 'good sense', and sounds like Hebrew שכל ''sekhel''; PCel *kʷēsl * madháil = stem ...14 KB (2,074 words) - 02:10, 4 September 2025
- * Nouns with a ''-n'' plural are almost always either feminine or ''-n''-stem masculine. The genitive plural ''-n'' was generalized from masculine ''n''-stem nouns. ...58 KB (8,662 words) - 19:14, 18 February 2026
- *tsreang = stem (botany and linguistics) **Wălach - Celtic ...30 KB (4,915 words) - 19:01, 18 March 2024