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{{Short description|Language family native to Eurasia}}
{{otheruses3|Indo-European}}
{{Redirect|Indo-European|Eurasian people living in or connected with Indonesia|Indo people|other uses}}
{{Infobox Language family
{{Pp-move|small pp=yes}}
|name = Indo-European

|region = Before the fifteenth century, ], and ], ] and ]; today worldwide.
{{Use Oxford spelling|date=April 2022}}
|familycolor = Indo-European
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2022}}
|family = One of the world's major ]; although some have ], none of these has received mainstream acceptance.
{{Infobox language family
|proto-name = ]
| name = Indo-European
|child1 = ]
| region = Worldwide
|child2 = ]
| familycolor = Indo-European
|child3 = ]
| family = One of the world's primary ]
|child4 = ]
| protoname = ]?{{indent|1}}{{*}}]
|child5 = ]
| child1 = ]?{{indent|1}}{{*}}]{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}
|child6 = ]
| child2 = ] {{Extinct}}
|child7 = ]
|child8 = ] | child3 = ]
|child9 = ] (including ]) | child4 = ]
|child10 = ] | child5 = ]
|child11 = ] | child6 = ]
| child7 = ]?{{indent|1}}{{*}}]{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}
|iso2=ine
|map = ] | child8 = ]
| child9 = ]
|map_caption={{legend|green|Countries with a majority of speakers of IE languages}}
| child11 = ] {{Extinct}}
{{legend|lightgreen|Countries with an IE minority language with official status}}
| child12 = Unclassified or poorly attested:{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}]? {{Extinct}}{{indent|1}}{{*}}] {{Extinct}}
| iso2 = ine
| iso5 = ine
| glotto = indo1319
| glottorefname = Indo-European
| map = Indo-European Language Family Branches in Eurasia.png
| mapcaption = Present-day distribution of Indo-European languages in Eurasia:
{{legend|#00CCFE|] (])}}
{{legend|#7F007F|]}}
{{legend|#3d6098|] (])}}
{{legend|#007F00|]}}{{legend|#FEA600|] (] and ])}}
{{legend|#D30000|] (] and ])}}
{{legend|#FEDC55|] (])}}
{{legend|#00007F|]}}
{{legend|#751eb4|]}}
{{legend|#587f00 |]}}
{{legend|#967F12|] (])}}
{{legend|#BEBEBE|Non-Indo-European languages}}
Dotted/striped areas indicate where ] is common (more visible upon full enlargement of the map).
| glottoname =
| notes = {{ublist|{{Extinct}} indicates this branch of the language family is extinct}}
| ancestor =
}} }}
{{Indo-European topics|wide=300px}}
The '''Indo-European languages''' comprise a ] of several hundred related ]s and ]s,<ref>449 according to the 2005 ] estimate, about half (219) belonging to the ] sub-branch.</ref> including most of the major languages of ], the northern ] (]), the ] (]), and much of ]. Indo-European (''Indo'' refers to the Indian subcontinent) has the largest numbers of speakers of the recognised families of languages in the world today, with its languages spoken by approximately three billion native speakers.<ref>the ] family of tongues has the second-largest number of speakers.</ref>
The '''Indo-European languages''' are a ] native to the northern ], the ], and the ]. Some European languages of this family—], ], ], ], ], and ]—have expanded through ] in the modern period and are now spoken across several continents. The Indo-European family is divided into several branches or sub-families, of which there are eight groups with languages still alive today: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]; another nine subdivisions are now ].


Of the ] contemporary languages in terms of native speakers according to ], 12 are Indo-European: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], accounting for over 1.6 billion native speakers. The ] form the largest sub-branch of Indo-European in terms of the number of native speakers as well as in terms of the number of individual languages.<ref>308 languages according to SIL; more than one billion speakers (see ]). Historically, also in terms of geographical spread (stretching from the ] to ]; c.f. ])</ref> Today, the individual Indo-European languages with the most native speakers are English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, ], ], ], ] and ] each with over 100 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction.


In total, 46% of the world's population (3.2 billion people) speaks an Indo-European language as a ]—by far the highest of any language family. There are about 445 living Indo-European languages, according to an estimate by '']'', with over two-thirds (313) of them belonging to the Indo-Iranian branch.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=2-16|title=Ethnologue report for Indo-European|publisher=Ethnologue }}</ref>
== Classification ==
]
{{Indo-European topics}}
{{Hypothetical Indo-European subfamilies}}
The various subgroups of the Indo-European language family include (in historical order of their first attestation):


All Indo-European languages are descended from a single prehistoric language, ] as ], spoken sometime during the ] or early ]. The geographical location where it was spoken, the ], has been the object of many competing hypotheses; the academic consensus supports the ], which posits the homeland to be the ] in what is now ] and ], associated with the ] and other related archaeological cultures during the 4th millennium BC to early 3rd millennium BC. By the time the first written records appeared, Indo-European had already evolved into numerous languages spoken across much of ], ], and part of ]. Written evidence of Indo-European appeared during the Bronze Age in the form of ] and the ] of ] and ]. The oldest records are isolated Hittite words and names—interspersed in texts that are otherwise in the unrelated ], a ]—found in texts of the ]n colony of ] in eastern ] dating to the 20th century BC.<ref>{{cite book |last=Bryce |first=Trevor |date= 2005|title=Kingdom of the Hittites |edition=new |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=37 |isbn=978-0-19-928132-9 }}</ref> Although no older written records of the original ] remain, some aspects of ] and ] can be reconstructed from later evidence in the daughter cultures.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mallory |first=J. P. |date=2006 |title=The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-928791-8 |pages=442}}</ref> The Indo-European family is significant to the field of ] as it possesses the second-longest ] of any known family, after the ] ] and ]. The analysis of the family relationships between the Indo-European languages, and the reconstruction of their common source, was central to the development of the methodology of historical linguistics as an academic discipline in the 19th century.
* ], earliest attested branch, from the ]; extinct, most notably including the ] of the ].
* ], descending from a common ancestor, ]
** ], including ], attested from the mid ].
** ], attested from roughly ] in the form of ], and from 520 BC in the form of ]
** ]
** ]
* ], fragmentary records in ] from the ]; ]ic traditions date to the ]. (See ], ].)
* ], including ] and its descendants (the ]), attested from the ].
* ], ] inscriptions date as early as the ]; ] texts from the ], see ].
* ] (including ] and ]), earliest testimonies in ] inscriptions from around the ], earliest coherent texts in ], ], see ].
* ], attested from the ].
* ], extinct tongues of the ], extant in two dialects, attested from roughly the ].
* ], believed by many Indo-Europeanists to derive from a common proto-language later than Proto-Indo-European, while skeptical Indo-Europeanists regard Baltic and Slavic as no more closely related than any other two branches of Indo-European.
** ], attested from the ], earliest texts in ].
** ], attested from the ], and, for languages attested that late, they retain unusually many archaic features attributed to ].
* ], attested from the ]; relations with Illyrian, Dacian, or Thracian proposed.


The Indo-European language family is not considered by the current academic consensus in the field of linguistics to have any ] with other language families, although several ] propose such relations.
In addition to the classical ten branches listed above, several extinct and little-known languages have existed:


==History of Indo-European linguistics==
* ] — possibly related to Messapian or Venetic; relation to Albanian also proposed.
{{See also|Indo-European studies#History}}
* ] — close to Italic.
During the 16th century, European visitors to the ] began to notice similarities among ], ], and ] languages. In 1583, English ] missionary and ] scholar ] wrote a letter from ] to his brother (not published until the 20th century){{sfn|Auroux|2000|p=1156}} in which he noted similarities between Indian languages and ] and ].
* ] — apparently grouped with Venetic.
* ] — not conclusively deciphered.
* ] — language of ancient ], possibly close to Greek, Thracian, or Armenian.
* ] — extinct language once spoken north of Macedon.
* ] — possibly close to Dacian.
* ] — possibly close to Thracian or to Albanian – or both.
* ] — related to Greek; some propose relationships to Illyrian, Thracian or Phrygian.
* ] — possibly not Indo-European; possibly close to or part of Celtic.
* ] — possibly related to (or part of) Celtic, or Ligurian, or Italic.


Another account was made by ], a merchant born in ] in 1540, who travelled to the Indian subcontinent. Writing in 1585, he noted some word similarities between ] and Italian (these included ''devaḥ''/''dio'' "God", ''sarpaḥ''/''serpe'' "serpent", ''sapta''/''sette'' "seven", ''aṣṭa''/''otto'' "eight", and ''nava''/''nove'' "nine").{{sfn|Auroux|2000|p=1156}} However, neither Stephens' nor Sassetti's observations led to further scholarly inquiry.{{sfn|Auroux|2000|p=1156}}
No doubt other Indo-European languages once existed which have now vanished without leaving a trace.


In 1647, ] linguist and scholar ] noted the similarity among certain Asian and European languages and theorized that they were derived from a primitive common language that he called Scythian.{{sfn|Beekes|2011|loc= }} He included in his hypothesis ], ], ], ], ], and ], later adding ], ], and ]. However, Van Boxhorn's suggestions did not become widely known and did not stimulate further research.
A large majority of ] can be considered Indo-European, at least in content. Examples include


Ottoman Turkish traveler ] visited Vienna in 1665–1666 as part of a diplomatic mission and noted a few similarities between words in German and in Persian.
* ]
] and others made observations of the same type. Coeurdoux made a thorough comparison of Sanskrit, Latin, and Greek ] in the late 1760s to suggest a relationship among them. Meanwhile, ] compared different language groups, including Slavic, Baltic ("]"), Iranian ("]"), ], ], "Hottentot" (]), and others, noting that related languages (including Latin, Greek, German, and Russian) must have separated in antiquity from common ancestors.<ref name=Lomonosov> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200801211720/http://feb-web.ru/feb/lomonos/texts/lo0/lo7/lo7-5952.htm |date=1 August 2020 }}:
* ]
Представимъ долготу времени, которою сіи языки раздѣлились. ... Польской и россійской языкъ коль давно раздѣлились! Подумай же, когда курляндской! Подумай же, когда латинской, греч., нѣм., росс. О глубокая древность! Kurlandic! Think when Latin, Greek, German, and Russian! Oh, great antiquity!]</ref>
* ]


The hypothesis reappeared in 1786 when ] first lectured on the striking similarities among three of the oldest languages known in his time: ], ], and ], to which he tentatively added ], ], and ],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Poser |first1=William J. |last2=Campbell |first2=Lyle |date=1992 |chapter=Indo-European Practice and Historical Methodology |title=Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session and Parasession on The Place of Morphology in a Grammar |volume=18 |issue=1 |publisher=Berkeley Linguistics Society |pages=227–8 |doi=10.3765/bls.v18i1.1574 |access-date=7 December 2022 |url=http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/BLS/article/view/1574 }}</ref> though his classification contained some inaccuracies and omissions.<ref>{{cite book |author=Roger Blench |date=2004 |chapter=Archaeology and Language: methods and issues |editor=John Bintliff |title=A Companion To Archaeology |location=Oxford |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |pages=52–74 |chapter-url=http://www.rogerblench.info/Archaeology%20data/CH4-BLENCH.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060517091902/http://www.rogerblench.info/Archaeology%20data/CH4-BLENCH.pdf |archive-date=17 May 2006 |access-date=29 May 2010 }} Blench erroneously included ], ], and ] in the Indo-European languages, while omitting ].</ref> In one of the most famous quotations in linguistics, Jones made the following prescient statement in a lecture to the ] in 1786, conjecturing the existence of an earlier ancestor language, which he called "a common source" but did not name:
Membership of languages in the same language family is determined by the presence of '''shared retentions''', i.e., features of the proto-language (or reflexes of such features) that cannot be explained better by chance or borrowing (convergence). Membership in a branch/group/subgroup '''within''' a language family is determined by '''shared innovations''' which are presumed to have taken place in a common ancestor. For example, what makes Germanic languages "Germanic" is that large parts of the structures of all the languages so designated can be stated just once for all of them. In other words, they can be treated as an innovation that took place in Proto-Germanic, the source of all the Germanic languages.
{{Blockquote
|text=The Sanscrit {{sic}} language, whatever be its antiquity, is of a wonderful structure; more perfect than the Greek, more copious than the Latin, and more exquisitely refined than either, yet bearing to both of them a stronger affinity, both in the roots of verbs and the forms of grammar, than could possibly have been produced by accident; so strong indeed, that no ] could examine them all three, without believing them to have sprung from some common source, which, perhaps, no longer exists.{{notetag|The sentence goes on to say, equally correctly as it turned out: "...here is a similar reason, though not quite so forcible, for supposing that both the Gothic and the Celtic, though blended with a very different idiom, had the same origin with the Sanscrit; and the old Persian might be added to the same family."}}
|author=Sir William Jones
|title=Third Anniversary Discourse delivered 2 February 1786
|source=ELIOHS<ref name=Jones-1807>{{cite web |title=The Third Anniversary Discourse |last1=Jones |first1=William |url=http://www.eliohs.unifi.it/testi/700/jones/Jones_Discourse_3.html |date=2 February 1786 |website=Electronic Library of Historiography |publisher=Universita degli Studi Firenze |postscript=,}} taken from: {{cite book |title=The Works of Sir William Jones. With a Life of the Author |last1=Shore (Lord Teignmouth) |first1=John |date=1807 |volume=III |publisher=John Stockdale and John Walker |pages=24–46 |oclc=899731310 }}</ref>
}}


] first used the term ''Indo-European'' in 1813, deriving it from the geographical extremes of the language family: from ] to ].<ref>
A problem, however, is that shared innovations can be acquired by borrowing or other means. It has been asserted, for example, that many of the more striking features shared by Italic languages (Latin, Oscan, Umbrian, etc.) might well be "areal" features. More certainly, very similar-looking alterations in the systems of long vowels in the West Germanic languages greatly postdate any possible notion of a proto-language innovation (and cannot readily be regarded as "areal", either, since English and continental West Germanic were not a linguistic area). In a similar vein, there are many similar innovations in Germanic and Baltic/Slavic that are far more likely to be areal features than traceable to a common proto-language, such as the uniform development of a '''high''' vowel (*''u'' in the case of Germanic, *''i'' in the case of Baltic and Slavic) before the PIE syllabic resonants *''ṛ,* ḷ, *ṃ, *ṇ'', unique to these two groups among IE languages. But legitimate uncertainty about whether shared innovations are areal features, coincidence, or inheritance from a common ancestor, leads to disagreement over the proper subdivisions of any large language family. Thus specialists have postulated the existence of such subfamilies (subgroups) as Germanic with Slavic, ] and ]. The vogue for such subgroups waxes and wanes (Italo-Celtic for example used to be an absolutely standard feature of the Indo-European landscape; nowadays it is little honored, in part because much of the striking evidence on the basis of which it was postulated has turned out to have been misinterpreted).
{{cite book
| author=Robinson, Andrew
| title=The Last Man Who Knew Everything: Thomas Young, the Anonymous Genius who Proved Newton Wrong and Deciphered the Rosetta Stone, among Other Surprising Feats
| publisher=Penguin
| year=2007
| isbn=978-0-13-134304-7
| url-access=registration
| url=https://archive.org/details/lastmanwhoknewev00robi
}}
</ref><ref>In ''London Quarterly Review'' X/2 1813.; cf. {{harvnb|Szemerényi|Jones|Jones|1999|loc=p. 12 footnote 6.}}</ref> A synonym is '''Indo-Germanic''' (''Idg.'' or ''IdG.''), specifying the family's southeasternmost and northwesternmost branches. This first appeared in French (''indo-germanique'') in 1810 in the work of ]; in most languages this term is now dated or less common than ''Indo-European'', although in German ''indogermanisch'' remains the standard scientific term. A ] have also been used.


] was a pioneer in the field of comparative linguistic studies.]]
] refers to the theory that Indo-European (sensu stricto, i.e. the proto-language of the Indo-European languages known before the discovery of Hittite), and Proto-Anatolian, split from a common proto-language called Proto-Indo-Hittite by its first theoretician, Edgar Sturtevant. Validation of such a theory would consist of identifying formal-functional structures that can be coherently reconstructed for both branches but which can only be traced to a formal-functional structure that is either (a) different from both or else (b) shows evidence of a very early, group-wide innovation. As an example of (a), it is obvious that the Indo-European perfect subsystem in the verbs is '''formally''' superimposable on the Hittite ''ḫi''-verb subsystem, but there is no match-up functionally, such that (as has been held) the functional source must have been unlike both Hittite and Indo-European. As an example of (b), the solidly-reconstructable Indo-European deictic pronoun paradigm whose nominatives singular are *''so, *sā'' (*seH₂), ''*tod'' has been compared to a collection of clause-marking particles in Hittite, the argument being that the coalescence of these particles into the familiar Indo-European paradigm was an innovation of that branch of Proto-Indo-Hittite.
] wrote in 1816 ''On the conjugational system of the Sanskrit language compared with that of Greek, Latin, Persian and Germanic''<ref>{{cite book|title=Über das Conjugationssystem der Sanskritsprache : in Vergleichung mit jenem der griechischen, lateinischen, persischen und germanischen Sprache|author=Franz Bopp|location=Hildesheim|publisher=Olms|date=2010|edition=2|series=Documenta Semiotica : Serie 1, Linguistik|orig-year=1816}}</ref> and between 1833 and 1852 he wrote ''Comparative Grammar''. This marks the beginning of ] as an academic discipline. The classical phase of Indo-European ] leads from this work to ]'s 1861 ''Compendium'' and up to ]'s '']'', published in the 1880s. Brugmann's ] reevaluation of the field and ]'s development of the ] may be considered the beginning of "modern" Indo-European studies. The generation of Indo-Europeanists active in the last third of the 20th century (such as ], ], and ]) developed a better understanding of morphology and of ] in the wake of ]'s 1956 ''Apophony in Indo-European,'' who in 1927 pointed out the existence of the ] ḫ.<ref>{{Cite book|chapter=ə indo-européen et ḫ hittite|editor1-last=Taszycki|editor1-first=W.|editor2-last=Doroszewski|editor2-first=W.|title=Symbolae grammaticae in honorem Ioannis Rozwadowski |last=Kurylowicz|first=Jerzy |date=1927|volume=1|pages=95–104}}</ref> Kuryłowicz's discovery supported Ferdinand de Saussure's 1879 proposal of the existence of ''coefficients sonantiques'', elements de Saussure reconstructed to account for vowel length alternations in Indo-European languages. This led to the so-called ], a major step forward in Indo-European linguistics and a confirmation of de Saussure's theory.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}}


==Classification==
=== Satem and Centum languages ===
{{See also|Indo-European migrations}}
{{Cleanup-jargon|date=October 2007}}
The various subgroups of the Indo-European language family include ten major branches, listed below in alphabetical order:
]/]/] cultures).]]
* ], attested from the 13th century AD;<ref name="dictalit">{{cite encyclopedia | last=Elsie | first=Robert | author-link=Robert Elsie | title=Theodor of Shkodra (1210) and Other Early Texts| encyclopedia=Albanian Literature: A Short History |page=5 | publisher=] | location=New York/Westport/London |date=2005}}</ref> ] evolved from an ancient ], traditionally thought to be ], or otherwise a totally unattested Balkan ] that was closely related to Illyrian and ].<ref>In his latest book, ] supports the thesis that the Illyrian language belongs to the Northwestern group, that the Albanian language is descended from Illyrian, and that Albanian is related to Messapic which is an earlier Illyrian dialect ({{harvnb|Hamp|2007}}).</ref><ref name="De Vaan">{{Cite book |last=De Vaan |first=Michiel |author-link=Michiel de Vaan |chapter=The phonology of Albanian |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SuR8DwAAQBAJ&q=Ylli+Proto-Albanian&pg=PA1732 |title=Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics |editor-last=Klein |editor-first=Jared |editor-last2=Joseph |editor-first2=Brian |editor-last3=Fritz |editor-first3=Matthias |date=11 June 2018 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |isbn=978-3-11-054243-1 |pages=1732–1749}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1= Curtis|first1= Matthew Cowan|title= Slavic–Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence|url= https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED546136|publisher= ProQuest LLC|access-date= 31 March 2017|page= 18|language= en|quote= So while linguists may debate about the ties between Albanian and older languages of the Balkans, and while most Albanians may take the genealogical connection to Illyrian as incontrovertible, the fact remains that there is simply insufficient evidence to connect Illyrian, Thracian, or Dacian with any language, including Albanian|isbn= 978-1-267-58033-7|date= 30 November 2011}}</ref>
* ], extinct by ], spoken in ], attested in isolated terms in ]/] mentioned in Semitic ] texts from the 20th and 19th centuries BC, ] from about 1650 BC.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.leidenuniv.nl/en/researcharchive/index.php3-c=178.htm|title= The peaks and troughs of Hittite|date= 2 May 2006|website= www.leidenuniv.nl|access-date= 25 November 2013|archive-date= 3 February 2017|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170203061604/http://www.leidenuniv.nl/en/researcharchive/index.php3-c=178.htm|url-status= dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/ar/61-70/65-66/65-66_CHD.pdf |title=The Hittite Computer Analysis Project |first=Hans G. |last=Güterbock |access-date=25 November 2013 |archive-date=2 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202224845/http://oi.uchicago.edu/pdf/ar/61-70/65-66/65-66_CHD.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref>
* ], attested from the early 5th century AD. It evolved from the ] which, according to the ], developed ''in situ'' from the ] of the 3rd millennium BC.<ref>]; ] (1995). ''Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans: A Reconstruction and Historical Analysis of a Proto-Language and Proto-Culture. Part I: The Text. Part II: Bibliography, Indexes''. Walter de Gruyter. ]&nbsp;].</ref><ref>Haber, Marc; Mezzavilla, Massimo; Xue, Yali; Comas, David; Gasparini, Paolo; Zalloua, Pierre; Tyler-Smith, Chris (2015). "Genetic evidence for an origin of the Armenians from Bronze Age mixing of multiple populations". ''European Journal of Human Genetics''. '''24''' (6): 931–6. ]&nbsp;10.1101/015396. ]:10.1038/ejhg.2015.206. ]&nbsp;4820045. ]&nbsp;26486470.</ref>
* ], believed by most Indo-Europeanists<ref>Such as {{harvnb|Schleicher|1874–1877|p=8}}, {{harvnb|Szemerényi|1957}}, {{harvnb|Collinge|1985}}, and {{harvnb|Beekes|1995|p=22}}.</ref> to form a phylogenetic unit, while a minority ascribes similarities to prolonged language-contact.
** ] (from ]), attested from the 9th century AD (]), earliest texts in ]. Slavic languages include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] (], ], ], ]), ], ], ], ], and ].
** ], attested from the 14th century AD; although attested relatively recently, they retain many archaic features attributed to ] (PIE). Living examples are ] and ].
* ] (from ]), attested since the 6th century BC; ] inscriptions date as early as the 6th century BC; ] from the 2nd century BC; Primitive Irish ]s from the 4th or 5th century AD, earliest inscriptions in ] from the 7th century AD. Modern Celtic languages include ], ], ], ], ] and ].
* ] (from ]), earliest attestations in ] inscriptions from around the 2nd century AD, earliest coherent texts in ], 4th century AD. ] manuscript tradition from about the 8th century AD. Includes ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].
* ] (from ], see also ]); fragmentary records in ] Greek from between 1450 and 1350 BC have been found.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.science20.com/news_articles/tablet_discovery_pushes_earliest_european_writing_back_150_years-77650|title= Tablet Discovery Pushes Earliest European Writing Back 150 Years|website= Science 2.0|date= 30 March 2011}}</ref> ]ic texts date to the 8th century BC.
* ], attested {{Circa|1400 BC}}, descended from ] (dated to the late 3rd millennium BC).
** ], attested from around 1400 BC in ] texts from ], showing ] words.<ref>{{cite book|title= Indian History|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MazdaWXQFuQC&pg=SL1-PA114|publisher= Allied Publishers|isbn=978-81-8424-568-4|page= 114 |date=1988 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.worldhistory.org/Mitanni/ |title= Mitanni |first= Joshua J. |last= Mark |date= 28 April 2011 |website= ]}}</ref> Epigraphically from the 3rd century BC in the form of ] (]). The ] is assumed to preserve intact records ] dating from about the mid-] in the form of ]. Includes a wide range of modern languages from ], Eastern ] and ], including ] (], ]), ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], as well as ] of ] and ] of the ] and ].
** ] or Iranic, attested from roughly 1000 BC in the form of ]. Epigraphically from 520 BC in the form of ] (]). Includes ], ], ], ], ], and ].
** ] (includes ], ], ], ], ], and ]).
* ] (from ]), attested from the 7th century BC. Includes the ancient ], ], as well as ] and its descendants, the ], such as ] and ].
* ], with proposed links to the ] of Southern Siberia.<ref>{{cite journal |first=David W. |last=Anthony |title=Two IE phylogenies, three PIE migrations, and four kinds of steppe pastoralism |journal=Journal of Language Relationship |volume=9 |date=2013 |pages=1–22|doi=10.31826/jlr-2013-090105 |s2cid=132712913 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Extant in two dialects (Turfanian and Kuchean, or Tocharian A and B), attested from roughly the 6th to the 9th century AD. Marginalized by the Old Turkic ] and probably extinct by the 10th century.


In addition to the classical ten branches listed above, several extinct and little-known languages and language-groups have existed or are proposed to have existed:
Many scholars classify the Indo-European sub-branches into a ] group and a ] group. This terminology comes from the different treatment of the three original ] rows. Satem languages lost the distinction between labiovelar and pure velar sounds, and at the same time ] the palatal velars. The centum languages, on the other hand, lost the distinction between palatal velars and pure velars. Geographically, the "eastern" languages belong in the Satem group: Indo-Iranian and Balto-Slavic (but not including Tocharian and Anatolian); and the "western" languages represent the Centum group: Germanic, Italic, and Celtic. The ] runs right between the Greek (Centum) and Armenian (Satem) languages (which a number of scholars regard as closely related), with Greek exhibiting some marginal Satem features. Some scholars think that some languages classify neither as Satem nor as Centum (Anatolian, Tocharian, and possibly Albanian). Note that the grouping does not imply a claim of ]: we do not need to postulate the existence of a "proto-Centum" or of a "proto-Satem". Areal contact among already distinct post-PIE languages (say, during the 3rd millennium BC) may have spread the sound changes involved. In any case, present-day specialists are rather less galvanized by the division than 19th cent. scholars were, partly because of the recognition that it is, after all, just one ] among the multitudes that criss-cross Indo-European linguistic geography. (Together with the recognition that the Centum Languages are no subgroup: as mentioned above, subgroups are defined by shared innovations, which the Satem languages definitely have, but the only thing that the "Centum Languages" have in common is staying put.)
* ]: hypothetical language associated with the proposed ] cultural area. Speculated to be connected to Italic or Venetic, and to have certain phonological features in common with Lusitanian.<ref>F. Ribezzo, ''Revue Internationale d'Onomastique'', II, 1948 {{p.|43}} sq. et III 1949, {{p.|45}} sq., M.Almagro dans ''RSLig'', XVI, 1950, {{p.|42}} sq, P.Laviosa Zambotti, l.c.</ref><ref name="Bernard">{{cite book |last1=Bernard |first1=Sergent |title=Les Indo-Européens: Histoire, langues, mythes |date=1995 |publisher=Bibliothèques scientifiques Payot |location=Paris |pages=84–85}}</ref>
* ]: possibly Iranic, Thracian, or Celtic
* ]: possibly very close to Thracian
* ]: Poorly-attested language spoken by the ], one of the three indigenous (i.e. pre-Greek and pre-Punic) tribes of Sicily. Indo-European affiliation widely accepted, possibly related to Italic or Anatolian.<ref name="Olga">{{cite book |last1=Tribulato |first1=Olga |title=Language and Linguistic Contact in Ancient Sicily |date=December 2012 |publisher=] |location=Cambridge |isbn=9781139248938 |pages=95–114}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Price |first1=Glanville |title=Encyclopedia of the languages of Europe |date=April 2000 |publisher=] |isbn=0631220399 |page=136}}</ref>
* ]: possibly related to Albanian, Messapian, or both
* ]: evidence too scant and uncertain to determine anything with certainty
* ]: possibly close to or part of Celtic.<ref name=kruta1>{{cite book |last=Kruta |first=Venceslas |date=1991 |title=The Celts |publisher=Thames and Hudson |page=54}}</ref>
* ]: possibly related to (or part of) Celtic, Ligurian, or Italic
* ]: proposed relationship to Greek.
* ]: not conclusively deciphered, often considered to be related to Albanian as the available fragmentary linguistic evidence shows common characteristic innovations and a number of significant lexical correspondences between the two languages<ref>{{cite book|last=Trumper|first=John|chapter=Some Celto-Albanian isoglosses and their implications|editor1-last=Grimaldi|editor1-first=Mirko|editor2-last=Lai|editor2-first=Rosangela|editor3-last=Franco|editor3-first=Ludovico|editor4-last=Baldi|editor4-first=Benedetta|title=Structuring Variation in Romance Linguistics and Beyond: In Honour of Leonardo M. Savoia|year=2018|publisher=John Benjamins Publishing Company|isbn=9789027263179|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kAR-DwAAQBAJ}} pp. 283–286.</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Friedman|first=Victor A.|title=The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact|chapter=The Balkans|series=Routledge Handbooks in Linguistics|editor=], ]|publisher=Routledge|year=2020|isbn=9781351109147|pages=385–403 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x4rvDwAAQBAJ}} p. 388</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Friedman|first=Victor A.|title=The Balkan Languages and Balkan Linguistics|journal=Annual Review of Anthropology|volume=40|year=2011|pages=275–291|doi=10.1146/annurev-anthro-081309-145932 }}</ref>
* ]: extinct language once spoken north of Macedon
* ]: language of the ancient ]. Very likely, but not certainly, a sister group to Hellenic.
* ]: an ancient language spoken by the Sicels (Greek Sikeloi, Latin Siculi), one of the three indigenous (i.e. pre-Greek and pre-Punic) tribes of Sicily. Proposed relationship to Latin or proto-Illyrian (Pre-Indo-European) at an earlier stage.<ref>{{cite book |last=Fine |first=John |date=1985 |title=The ancient Greeks: a critical history |publisher=] |page=72 |isbn=978-0-674-03314-6 |quote=Most scholars now believe that the Sicans and Sicels, as well as the inhabitants of southern Italy, were basically of Illyrian stock superimposed on an aboriginal 'Mediterranean' population.}}</ref>
* ]: proposed, pre-Celtic, Iberian language
* ]: possibly including Dacian
* ]: shares several similarities with Latin and the Italic languages, but also has some affinities with other IE languages, especially Germanic and Celtic.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lejeune |first1=Michel |title=Manuel de la langue vénète |date=1974 |publisher=C. Winter |location=Heidelberg |page=341}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Pokorny |first1=Julius |title=Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch |language=de |trans-title=Indogermanic Etymological Dictionary |date=1959 |location=Bern |publisher=Francke |pages=708–709, 882–884}}</ref>


]
=== Suggested superfamilies ===
]
Membership of languages in the Indo-European language family is determined by ] relationships, meaning that all members are presumed descendants of a common ancestor, ]. Membership in the various branches, groups, and subgroups of Indo-European is also genealogical, but here the defining factors are ''shared innovations'' among various languages, suggesting a common ancestor that split off from other Indo-European groups. For example, what makes the Germanic languages a branch of Indo-European is that much of their structure and phonology can be stated in rules that apply to all of them. Many of their common features are presumed innovations that took place in ], the source of all the Germanic languages.


In the 21st century, several attempts have been made to model the phylogeny of Indo-European languages using Bayesian methodologies similar to those applied to problems in biological phylogeny.<ref name=remco>{{cite journal |last1=Bouckaert |first1=Remco |last2=Lemey |first2=Philippe |date=24 August 2012 |title=Mapping the Origins and Expansion of the Indo-European Language Family |url= |journal=Science |volume=337 |issue=6097 |pages=957–960 |doi=10.1126/science.1219669 |pmid=22923579 |pmc=4112997 |bibcode=2012Sci...337..957B |hdl=11858/00-001M-0000-000F-EADF-A}}</ref><ref name=drinka>{{cite journal |last1=Drinka |first1=Bridget|author-link=Bridget Drinka |date=1 January 2013 |title=Phylogenetic and areal models of Indo-European relatedness: The role of contact in reconstruction |url=https://brill.com/view/journals/jlc/6/2/article-p379_9.xml |journal=Journal of Language Contact |volume=6 |issue=2 |pages=379–410 |doi=10.1163/19552629-00602009 |access-date=30 September 2020|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=chang>{{cite journal |last1=Chang |first1=Will |last2=Chundra |first2=Cathcart |date=January 2015 |title=Ancestry-constrained phylogenetic analysis supports the Indo-European steppe hypothesis |url=https://www.linguisticsociety.org/sites/default/files/news/ChangEtAlPreprint.pdf |journal=] |volume=91 |issue=1 |pages=194–244 |doi=10.1353/lan.2015.0005 |s2cid=143978664 |access-date=30 September 2020}}</ref> Although there are differences in absolute timing between the various analyses, there is much commonality between them, including the result that the first known language groups to diverge were the Anatolian and Tocharian language families, in that order.
Some linguists propose that Indo-European languages form part of a hypothetical ] superfamily, and attempt to relate Indo-European to other language families, such as ], ], ], ], and ]. This theory remains controversial, like the similar ] theory of ], and the ] postulation of ]. There are no possible theoretical objections to the existence of such superfamilies; the difficulty comes in finding concrete evidence that transcends chance resemblance and wishful thinking. The main problem for all of them is that in historical linguistics the noise-to-signal ratio steadily worsens over time, and at great enough time-depths it becomes open to reasonable doubt that it can even be possible to tell what is signal and what is noise.


===Tree versus wave model===
== History of the idea of Indo-European ==
{{See also|Language change}}
{{main|Indo-European studies}}
The "]" is considered an appropriate representation of the genealogical history of a language family if communities do not remain in contact after their languages have started to diverge. In this case, subgroups defined by shared innovations form a nested pattern. The tree model is not appropriate in cases where languages remain in contact as they diversify; in such cases subgroups may overlap, and the "]" is a more accurate representation.<ref>{{Citation
| last = François
| first = Alexandre
| contribution = Trees, Waves and Linkages: Models of Language Diversification
| editor1-last = Bowern
| editor1-first = Claire
| editor2-last = Evans
| editor2-first = Bethwyn
| title = The Routledge Handbook of Historical Linguistics
| pages = 161–89
| publisher = ]
| place = London
| year = 2014
| isbn = 978-0-415-52789-7
| contribution-url = http://alex.francois.free.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2014_HHL_Trees-waves-linkages_Diversification.pdf
| ref = francois
}}</ref> Most approaches to Indo-European subgrouping to date have assumed that the tree model is by-and-large valid for Indo-European;<ref>{{cite journal |title= From August Schleicher to Sergei Starostin: on the development of the tree-diagram models of the Indo-European languages |last=Blažek |first=Václav |journal=] |year=2007 |volume=35 |issue=1–2 |pages=82–109}}</ref> however, there is also a long tradition of wave-model approaches.<ref>{{cite book |title=Les dialectes indo-européens |language=fr |trans-title=The Indo-European dialects |publisher=Honoré Champion |last=Meillet |first=Antoine | year=1908 |location=Paris}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=I dialetti indoeuropei |publisher=Paideia |last=Bonfante |first=Giuliano |year=1931 |location=Brescia}}</ref>{{sfn|Porzig|1954}}


In addition to genealogical changes, many of the early changes in Indo-European languages can be attributed to ]. It has been asserted, for example, that many of the more striking features shared by Italic languages (Latin, Oscan, Umbrian, etc.) might well be ]. More certainly, very similar-looking alterations in the systems of ]s in the West Germanic languages greatly postdate any possible notion of a ] innovation (and cannot readily be regarded as "areal", either, because English and continental West Germanic were not a linguistic area). In a similar vein, there are many similar innovations in Germanic and Balto-Slavic that are far more likely areal features than traceable to a common proto-language, such as the uniform development of a ] (*''u'' in the case of Germanic, *''i/u'' in the case of Baltic and Slavic) before the PIE syllabic resonants *''ṛ, *ḷ, *ṃ, *ṇ'', unique to these two groups among IE languages, which is in agreement with the wave model. The ] even features areal convergence among members of very different branches.
Suggestions of similarities between Indian and European languages began to be made by European visitors to India in the sixteenth century. In 1583 Thomas Stephens, an English ] missionary in ], noted similarities between Indian languages, specifically ], and Greek and Latin. These observations were included in a letter to his brother which was not published until the twentieth century.<ref name="auroux">{{cite book
|first=Sylvain
|last=Auroux
|title=History of the Language Sciences
|pages=1156
|isbn=3110167352
|publisher=Walter de Gruyter
|location=Berlin, New York
|date=2000
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=yasNy365EywC&pg=PA1156&vq=stephens+sassetti&dq=3110167352&as_brr=3&sig=nOsHuf3fqPmzmjmGYk1UnvSiFAs
}}
</ref>


An extension to the '']-] model of language evolution'' suggests that early IE had featured limited contact between distinct lineages, with only the Germanic subfamily exhibiting a less treelike behaviour as it acquired some characteristics from neighbours early in its evolution. The internal diversification of especially West Germanic is cited to have been radically non-treelike.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Nakhleh |first1=Luay |last2=Ringe |first2=Don |last3=Warnow |first3=Tandy |author3-link=Tandy Warnow |title=Perfect Phylogenetic Networks: A New Methodology for Reconstructing the Evolutionary History of Natural Languages |name-list-style= amp |date=2005 |journal=] |volume=81 |issue=2 |pages= 382–420 |doi=10.1353/lan.2005.0078 |citeseerx=10.1.1.65.1791 |s2cid=162958 |url=http://www.cs.rice.edu/~nakhleh/Papers/NRWlanguage.pdf }}</ref>
The first account to mention Sanskrit came from ] (born in Florence, Italy in 1540 AD), a Florentine merchant who travelled to the Indian subcontinent and was among the first European observers to study the ancient Indian language, Sanskrit. Writing in 1585, he noted some word similarities between Sanskrit and Italian (e.g. deva/dio 'God', sarpa/serpe 'snake', sapta/sette 'seven', ashta/otto 'eight', nava/nove 'nine').<ref name="auroux"/> Unfortunately neither Stephens' nor Sasetti's observations led to any further scholarly inquiry.<ref name="auroux"/>


===Proposed subgroupings===
In 1647 ] linguist and scholar ] noted the similarity among ]s, and supposed the existence of a primitive common language which he called "'']''". He included in his hypothesis ], ], ], ], and ], later adding ], ] and ]. However, the suggestions of van Boxhorn did not become widely known and did not stimulate further research.
{{Hypothetical Indo-European subfamilies}}
Specialists have postulated the existence of higher-order subgroups such as ], ], ] or Graeco-Armeno-Aryan, and Balto-Slavo-Germanic. However, unlike the ten traditional branches, these are all controversial to a greater or lesser degree.<ref>{{cite book |title=Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture |publisher=Fitzroy Dearborn |last1=Mallory |first1=J. P. |last2=Adams |first2=D. Q. |year=1997 |location=London}}</ref>


The Italo-Celtic subgroup was at one point uncontroversial, considered by ] to be even better established than Balto-Slavic.{{sfn|Porzig|1954|p=39}} The main lines of evidence included the genitive suffix ''-ī''; the superlative suffix ''-m̥mo''; the change of /p/ to /kʷ/ before another /kʷ/ in the same word (as in ''penkʷe'' > ''*kʷenkʷe'' > Latin {{lang|la|quīnque}}, Old Irish {{lang|sga|cóic}}); and the subjunctive morpheme ''-ā-''.{{sfn|Fortson|2004|p=247}} This evidence was prominently challenged by ],<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Italo-Celtic revisited |encyclopedia=Ancient Indo-European dialects |publisher=] |last=Watkins |first=Calvert |editor1-last=Birnbaum |editor1-first=Henrik |editor2-last=Puhvel |editor2-first=Jaan |year=1966 |location=Berkeley |pages=29–50}}</ref> while Michael Weiss has argued for the subgroup.<ref>{{cite conference |title= Italo-Celtica: linguistic and cultural points of contact between Italic and Celtic |conference=Proceedings of the 23rd annual UCLA Indo-European Conference |publisher= Hempen |last=Weiss |first=Michael |editor1-last=Jamison |editor1-first=Stephanie W. |editor2-last= Melchert |editor2-first= H. Craig |editor3-last= Vine |editor3-first=Brent |year=2012 |location= Bremen |pages=151–73 |url=https://www.academia.edu/3249855 |access-date=19 February 2018 |isbn=978-3-934106-99-4}}</ref>
The hypothesis re-appeared in 1786 when ] first lectured on similarities between four of the oldest languages known in his time: ], ], ], and ]. Systematic comparison of these and other old languages conducted by ] supported this theory, and Bopp's ''Comparative Grammar'', appearing between ] and ] counts as the starting-point of ] as an academic discipline.


Evidence for a relationship between Greek and Armenian includes the regular change of the ] to ''a'' at the beginnings of words, as well as terms for "woman" and "sheep".<ref>{{cite journal |title=Review of ''The linguistic relationship between Armenian and Greek'' by James Clackson |last=Greppin |first=James |journal=] |year=1996 |volume=72 |issue=4 |pages=804–07 |doi=10.2307/416105 |jstor=416105}}</ref> Greek and Indo-Iranian share innovations mainly in verbal morphology and patterns of nominal derivation.<ref>{{cite book |title=Indoiranisch-griechische Gemeinsamkeiten der Nominalbildung und deren indogermanische Grundlagen |language=de |trans-title=Indo-Iranian-Greek similarities in nominal formation and their Indo-European foundations |publisher=Institut für Sprachwissenschaft der Universität Innsbruck |last=Euler |first=Wolfram |author-link=Wolfram Euler |year=1979 |location=Innsbruck}}</ref> Relations have also been proposed between Phrygian and Greek,{{sfn|Lubotsky|1988}} and between Thracian and Armenian.{{sfn|Kortlandt|1988}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Renfrew |first=Colin |author-link=Colin Renfrew |date=1987 |title= Archaeology & Language. The Puzzle of the Indo-European Origins |location=London |publisher=Jonathan Cape |isbn= 978-0224024952}}</ref> Some fundamental shared features, like the ] (a verb form denoting action without reference to duration or completion) having the perfect active particle -s fixed to the stem, link this group closer to Anatolian languages{{sfn|Encyclopædia Britannica|1981|p=593}} and Tocharian. Shared features with Balto-Slavic languages, on the other hand (especially present and preterit formations), might be due to later contacts.{{sfn|Encyclopædia Britannica|1981|loc=p. 667 George S. Lane, Douglas Q. Adams, ''The Tocharian problem''}}
==Historical evolution==
===Sound changes===
{{main | Indo-European sound laws}}
As the Proto-Indo-European language broke up, its sound system diverged as well, changing according to various ]s evidenced in the daughter-languages. Notable cases of such sound laws include ] in ], loss of prevocalic ''*p-'' in ], loss of prevocalic ''*s-'' in ], ] in ], as well as ] (discussed above). ] and ] may or may not have operated at the common Indo-European stage.


The ] hypothesis proposes that the Indo-European language family consists of two main branches: one represented by the Anatolian languages and another branch encompassing all other Indo-European languages. Features that separate Anatolian from all other branches of Indo-European (such as the gender or the verb system) have been interpreted alternately as archaic debris or as innovations due to prolonged isolation. Points proffered in favour of the Indo-Hittite hypothesis are the (non-universal) Indo-European agricultural terminology in Anatolia<ref>The supposed autochthony of Hittites, the Indo-Hittite hypothesis and migration of agricultural "Indo-European" societies became intrinsically linked together by Colin Renfrew ({{harvnb|Renfrew|2001|pp=36–73}}).</ref> and the preservation of laryngeals.{{sfn|Encyclopædia Britannica|1981|loc=Houwink ten Cate, H.J.; Melchert, H. Craig & van den Hout, Theo P.J. p. 586 ''The parent language, Laryngeal theory''; pp. 589, 593 ''Anatolian languages''}} However, in general this hypothesis is considered to attribute too much weight to the Anatolian evidence. According to another view, the Anatolian subgroup left the Indo-European parent language comparatively late, approximately at the same time as Indo-Iranian and later than the Greek or Armenian divisions. A third view, especially prevalent in the so-called French school of Indo-European studies, holds that extant similarities in non-] languages in general—including Anatolian—might be due to their peripheral location in the Indo-European language-area and to early separation, rather than indicating a special ancestral relationship.{{sfn|Encyclopædia Britannica|1981|loc=p. 594, ''Indo-Hittite hypothesis''}} Hans J. Holm, based on lexical calculations, arrives at a picture roughly replicating the general scholarly opinion and refuting the Indo-Hittite hypothesis.<ref>{{harvnb|Holm|2008|pp=629–36}}. The result is a partly new chain of separation for the main Indo-European branches, which fits well to the grammatical facts, as well as to the geographical distribution of these branches. In particular it clearly demonstrates that the Anatolian languages did not part as first ones and thereby refutes the Indo-Hittite hypothesis.</ref>
===Indo-European expansion===
The earliest attestations of Indo-European languages date to the early 2nd millennium BC. At that time, the languages were already diversified and widely distributed, so that "loss of contact" between the individual dialects is accepted to have taken place before 2500 BC.<ref>], ''Comparative Linguistics. Current Trends of Linguistics'', Den Haag (1972)</ref> Newer theories oppose this timeframe<ref>Chapter 11 (L’influenza del ‘catastrofismo’ sulla linguistica storica) of Le origini delle lingue d’Europa. Vol. I. La teoria della continuità. ] , En translation </ref>. Competing scenarios for the early history of Indo-European are thus largely compatible{{Fact|date=October 2007}} for times after 2500 BC, even if they are incommensurable for the 4th millennium BC and earlier. The following timeline inserts the scenario suggested by the mainstream{{Fact|date=October 2007}} ] for the mid 5th to mid 3rd millennia (see below for competing hypotheses).


===Satem and centum languages===
====Timeline constructed on 'Kurgan Hypothesis'====
{{Main|Centum and satem languages}}
] in the ] framework]]
[[File:Indo-European isoglosses.png|thumb|upright=1.6|Some significant isoglosses in Indo-European daughter languages at around 500 BC.
* ]–4000: '''Early PIE'''. ], ] and ] cultures, ]. (The early presence of the horse at Sredny Stog has been discredited as decisive&mdash;genetic evidence does not supply a single origin for the domesticated horse.)
{{Legend|#9fc7f3|Blue: centum languages}}
* ]–3500: The ] (prototypical ]-building) emerges in the steppe, and the ] in the northern ]. ] models postulate the separation of ] before this time.
{{Legend|#ef7a6e|Red: satem languages}}
* ]–3000: '''Middle PIE'''. The Yamna culture reaches its peak: it represents the classical reconstructed ], with ], early two-wheeled proto-chariots, predominantly practising ], but also with permanent settlements and ]s, subsisting on agriculture and fishing, along rivers. Contact of the Yamna culture with late ] cultures results in the "kurganized" ] and ] cultures. The ] shows the earliest evidence of the early ], and bronze weapons and artifacts enter Yamna territory. Probable early ].
{{Legend|#f6a20f|Orange: languages with ]}}
{{Legend|#a1f091|Green: languages with PIE *-tt- > -ss-}}
{{Legend|#f6d3ab|Tan: languages with PIE *-tt- > -st-}}
{{Legend|#fdd1d1|Pink: languages with instrumental, dative and ablative plural endings (and some others) in *-m- rather than *-bh-}}]]
The division of the Indo-European languages into satem and centum groups was put forward by Peter von Bradke in 1890, although ] did propose a similar type of division in 1886. In the satem languages, which include the Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian branches, as well as (in most respects) Albanian and Armenian, the reconstructed ] remained distinct and were fricativized, while the labiovelars merged with the 'plain velars'. In the centum languages, the palatovelars merged with the plain velars, while the labiovelars remained distinct. The results of these alternative developments are exemplified by the words for "hundred" in Avestan ({{lang|ae|satem}}) and Latin ({{lang|la|centum}})—the initial palatovelar developed into a fricative {{IPA|}} in the former, but became an ordinary velar {{IPA|}} in the latter.


Rather than being a genealogical separation, the centum–satem division is commonly seen as resulting from innovative changes that spread across PIE dialect-branches over a particular geographical area; the centum–satem ] intersects a number of other isoglosses that mark distinctions between features in the early IE branches. It may be that the centum branches in fact reflect the original state of affairs in PIE, and only the satem branches shared a set of innovations, which affected all but the peripheral areas of the PIE dialect continuum.{{sfn|Encyclopædia Britannica|1981|pp=588, 594}} Kortlandt proposes that the ancestors of Balts and Slavs took part in satemization before being drawn later into the western Indo-European sphere.{{sfn|Kortlandt|1990}}
] distribution]]


==Proposed external relations==
* ]–2500: '''Late PIE'''. The Yamna culture extends over the entire Pontic steppe. The ] extends from the ] to the ], corresponding to the latest phase of Indo-European unity, the vast "kurganized" area disintegrating into various independent languages and cultures, but still in loose contact and thus enabling the spread of technology and early loans between the groups (except for the Anatolian and Tocharian branches, already isolated from these processes). The Centum-Satem division has probably run its course, but the phonetic trends of Satemization remain active.
{{More citations needed section|date=June 2021}}
* ]–2000: The breakup into the proto-languages of the attested dialects has done its work. Speakers of ] live in the ], speakers of ] north of the Caspian in the ] culture. The Bronze Age reaches ] with the ], whose people probably use various Centum dialects. ] speakers (or alternatively, ] and ] communities in close contact) emerge in north-eastern Europe. The ] possibly correspond to proto-].
From the very beginning of Indo-European studies, there have been attempts to link the Indo-European languages genealogically to other languages and language families. However, these theories remain highly controversial, and most specialists in Indo-European linguistics are skeptical or agnostic about such proposals.<ref name=Kallio2018>{{cite book |last1=Kallio |first1=Petri |last2=Koivulehto |first2=Jorma |date=2018 |chapter=More remote relationships of Proto-Indo-European |editor1=Jared Klein |editor2=Brian Joseph |editor3=Matthias Fritz |title=Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics |pages=2280–2291}}</ref>
] distribution]]
]]]
] and ] distribution]]
* ]–1500: Invention of the ], which leads to the split and rapid spread of ] and ] from the ] and the ] over much of ], Northern ], ] and Eastern ]. Proto-Anatolian splits into ] and ]. The pre-Proto-Celtic ] has an active metal industry (]).
* ]–1000: The ] develops (pre-)], and the (pre-)] ] and ] cultures emerge in Central Europe, introducing the ]. ] migration into the ]. Redaction of the '']'' and rise of the ] in the ]. Flourishing and decline of the ]. The ] gives way to the ].
* ]–]: The ] spread over Central and Western Europe. Northern Europe enters the ], the formative phase of ]. ] initiates Greek literature and early ]. The Vedic civilization gives way to the ]. ] composes the ]s; rise of the ], replacing the ] and ]. The ] supplant the ] (]) in the Pontic steppe. Separation of Proto-Italic into ] and ], and foundation of ]. Genesis of the ] and ] alphabets. A variety of ] have speakers in Southern Europe. The Anatolian languages suffer ].


Proposals linking the Indo-European languages with a single language family include:<ref name=Kallio2018/>
==Proto-Indo-European==
* ], joining Indo-European with ]
{{main|Proto-Indo-European language}}
* ], postulated by ], which joins Indo-European with ]
===Location hypotheses===
Scholars have dubbed the common ancestral (reconstructed) language ] (PIE). They disagree as to the original ] location (the so-called "]" or "original homeland") from where it originated.


Other proposed families include:<ref name=Kallio2018/>
The ] culture has always occupied a prominent place in locating the Indo-European origins. Preponderance of what generally are considered Indo-European traits have lead many to assume this culture in Northern Europe to provide the homeland culture of the Proto-Indo-Europeans, especially among German archeologists of the early twentieth century. However, despite strenuous attempts this culture could not be linked to the Indo-Europeans of the Balkans, Greece or Anatolia, and neither to the Indo-Europeans in Asia. Ever since, establishing the correct relationship between the Corded Ware and Pontic-Caspian regions is essential to solving the entire homeland problem.<ref name="Mallory">In Search of the Indo-Europeans - J.P.Mallory, Thames and Hudson 1989, p245,ISBN 0-500-27616-1</ref> The discovery since the 70s of ] being genetically a Late Neolithic extension to Corded Ware, and recent Bell Beaker related discoveries as far as Romania and Early Helladic Greece<ref>When the West meets the East: The Eastern Periphery of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon and its Relation with the Aegean Early Bronze Age. In: I. Galanaki, I. Galanakis, H. Tomas & R. Laffineur (eds.), Between the Aegean and Baltic Seas: Prehistory across Borders. Proceedings of the International Conference ‘Bronze and Early Iron Age Interconnections and Contemporary Developments between the Aegean and the Region of the Balkan Peninsula, Central and Northern Europe’. University of Zagreb, 10-14 April 2005. Aegaeum 27 (Liège: Université, 2007), pp. 91-107- Volkert Heyd, 2005</ref>, did not change the doubt since the rapid expanse of the Bell Beakers has traditionally been viewed upon as a rather cultural phenomenon.
* ], comprising all or some of the Eurasiatic languages and the ], ] (or wider, ]) and ] language families
* ], a theory championed by ], comprising the ], ] and various ']' families (], ], ], ], ]) and possibly others


Nostratic and Eurasiatic, in turn, have been included in even wider groupings, such as ], a language family separately proposed by ] and ] that encompasses almost all of the world's natural languages with the exception of those native to ], ], ], and the ].
Mainstream opinion locates PIE in the ] in the ] (from ca. 4000 BC; see ]). The main competitor of this is the ] advanced by ], dating PIE to several millennia earlier, associating the spread of Indo-European languages with the ] spread of farming (see ]). Neither of both hypotheses survived the initial proposals as archeological and linguistic evicence forced their revision on some fundamental details, varying from serious general criticism on the kurganization of Anatolia through the Caucasian route (Mallory 1989, p233) forwarded in the original Kurgan hypothesis, to linguistic criticism on the unrealistic timedepth implied by the Anatolian hypothesis. Efforts to make the two hypotheses compatible include the rapid divergence of the Romance, Celtic and Balto-Slavic languages around 6,500 years ago<ref>Gray and Atkinson (2003) ''Nature'' vol 426, pp436-438</ref> makes the two hypotheses compatible.<ref>Balter (2004) ''Science'' '''303''', pp1323-1326.</ref>


==Evolution==
It should be noted that theories of the origin of Indo-European languages are not based on purely linguistic concepts. These theories are highly dependent on extra-linguistic factors, particularly interpretations of archaeological findings and the unattested meaning of words dating back as much as 3500 years or more before writing. The reference above to "mainstream" opinion concerning origins in the Pontic-Caspian steppes relies on some of such extra-linguistic conclusions, leaving some other key issues concerning timedepth explicitly unresolved (Mallory 1989, p137). Since there is no direct way of knowing what language was spoken by a particular archaeological culture or how the meaning of words changed over thousands of years, theories about the location of the origin of Indo-European languages remain largely conjectural.


===Proto-Indo-European===
{{cquote|Early studies of Indo-European languages focused on those most familiar to the original European researchers: the Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Baltic and Slavic families. Affinities between these and the "Aryan" languages spoken in faraway India were noticed by European travelers as early as the 16th century. That they might all share a common ancestor was first proposed in 1786 by Sir William Jones, an English jurist and student of Eastern cultures. He thus launched what came to be known as the Indo-European hypothesis, which served as the principal stimulus to the founders of historical linguistics in the 19th century. <ref>Scientific American, March 1990, P.110</ref>}}
{{Main|Proto-Indo-European language}}
].<br>– Center: Steppe cultures<br>1 (black): Anatolian languages (archaic PIE)<br>2 (black): Afanasievo culture (early PIE)<br>3 (black) Yamnaya culture expansion (Pontic-Caspian steppe, Danube Valley) (late PIE)<br>4A (black): Western Corded Ware<br>4B-C (blue & dark blue): Bell Beaker; adopted by Indo-European speakers<br>5A-B (red): Eastern Corded ware<br>5C (red): Sintashta (proto-Indo-Iranian)<br>6 (magenta): Andronovo<br>7A (purple): Indo-Aryans (Mittani)<br>7B (purple): Indo-Aryans (India)<br> (dark yellow): proto-Balto-Slavic<br>8 (grey): Greek<br>9 (yellow):Iranians<br>– : Armenian, expanding from western steppe]]
The proposed Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) is the ] common ancestor of the Indo-European languages, spoken by the ]. From the 1960s, knowledge of Anatolian became certain enough to establish its relationship to PIE. Using the method of ], an earlier stage, called Pre-Proto-Indo-European, has been proposed.


PIE is an ], in which the grammatical relationships between words were signaled through inflectional morphemes (usually endings). The ] of PIE are basic ]s carrying a ] meaning. By addition of ]es, they form ], and by addition of ], these form grammatically inflected words (] or ]). The reconstructed ] system is complex and, like the noun, exhibits a system of ].
====Paleolithic Continuity Theory====
{{main | Paleolithic Continuity Theory}}
A recent version of the hypothesis of European origin of PIE is the "]" proposed by Western European theorists. This hypothesis draws on general linguistic theory and previously unavailable information from genetics, paleao-anthropology and archeology, and argues for an uninterrupted continuity of Indo-European languages from ] cultures.


===Diversification===
According to Mallory, the consequence of rejecting a Pontic presence in Central and Northern Europe during the Eneolithic, and proving local continuity of Corded Ware culture back to Funnelbeaker and Ertebølle cultures, would be a vast linguistic continuum during the Mesolithic or
{{See also|Indo-European migrations}}
Paleolithic that connected the North Sea with the Volga-Ural.<ref>Mallory 1989, p.254</ref> Shared development and unbroken contact up to the historic distribution of Indo European languages would include Mesolithic contacts, the course of Neolitization, and the subsequent Second Products Revolution important to the Proto Indo Europeans (Mallory, p218). The latter started in Late Neolithic and reached its height in the Bronze Age and was typified by the use of the plough, dairy products, wool, and wheeled vehicles, only to be closed off about 2500 BC at the very least by the appearance of the chariot and its adoption in a shared Indo European mythology and vocabularity. According to this view, some complex process of assimilation and convergence would acount to the development of shared features.
The diversification of the parent language into the attested branches of daughter languages is historically unattested. The timeline of the evolution of the various daughter languages, on the other hand, is mostly undisputed, quite regardless of the question of ].


Using a mathematical analysis borrowed from evolutionary biology, ] and ] propose the following evolutionary tree of Indo-European branches:{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=56–58}}
All Neolithic cultures of Europe either are a direct continuation of Mesolithic ones, or have been created by Mesolithic groups after their Neolithization by intrusive farmers from the Middle East.<ref>The Paleolithic Continuity Theory on Indo-European Origins: An Introduction - Mario Alinei </ref> The Neolithic advance of Balkan farmers towards the north and west, followed and was ultimately confined by the fertile soils that could be cultivated without the plough - that was not invented yet. This advance of agriculture was deterred by a thousand years, due to less fertile soils or, to the contrary, overtly fertile heavy river sediments that offered less favorable conditions to traditional neolithic clearing technics. This became the scene of a "tertiary" zone of neolithization by the originally mesolithic autochthons that occupied the wetlands in what has been described as a deliberate choice, triggered by an abundant variety of habitats favourable to fishing, hunting and gathering.
* Pre-] (before 3500 BC)
]
* Pre-]
This Neolithic advance has commonly been pictured as a colonization process by Balkan farmers and was for instance featured by ] (with ] and ] being the most important derivate cultures) and ]. These cultures had already passed their "aceramic Neolithic stage" when they became neighbours to the presumably autochthon and semi-sedentary fishing cultures, whose cultural level has been described as "ceramic Mesolithic".<ref>De Roevers, p135</ref> By then most Mesolithic people employed a distinct type of pottery manufactured by methods not known to the Neolithic farmers. Though each area developed an individual style, yet some common features such as the point or knob base and the superimposed circular rolls of clay, suggests enduring contact and even ''"ethnic"'' relationships between the groups.<ref>De Roevers, p.162</ref> The special shape of this pottery has been related to transport by logboat in wetland areas (De Roever 2004,p.163). Jeunesse et al (1991, fig.22) related similar point base pottery from Spain, southern Scandinavia and the Dnieper-Donets region in the Ukraine. Another area featuring neolithic point base pottery is Northern Africa.
* Pre-Italic and Pre-Celtic (before 2500 BC)
* Pre-Armenian and Pre-Greek (after 2500 BC)
* Proto-] (2000 BC)
* Pre-Germanic and Pre-Balto-Slavic;{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=56–58}} proto-Germanic {{Circa|500 BC}}{{sfn|Ringe|2006|p=67}}


David Anthony proposes the following sequence:{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=100}}
Especially interrelated are ] in the Netherlands, Ellerbek and ] in Northern Germany and Scandinavia, "Ceramic Mesolithic" pottery of Belgium and Northern France (including non-Linear pottery such as La Hoguette, Bliquy, Villeneuve-Saint-Germain), the Roucedour culture in Southwest France and the river and lake areas of Northern Poland and Russia.<ref name="Roever">Jutta Paulina de Roever - Swifterbant-aardewerk, een analyse van de neolithische nederzettingen bij swifterbnt, 5e millennium voor Christus, Barkhuis & Groningen University Libary, Groningen 2004 </ref><ref>De Roevers 2004, p.162-163</ref> Dmitry Telegin assign the early fifth millennium ] of hunters and fishers to a broad cultural region that spanned the Vistula in Poland southeast to the Dnieper. The dispersion of La Hoguette also intrudes typical Linear Pottery regions. Both La Hoguette and Roucadourien have been proposed to be older than Linear Pottery. The Mesolithic peoples in the hunter-gatherer phase already produced their own pottery when the first neolithic farmers arrived at the Rhine.<ref>Lüning et al 1089, Lüning 2000, De Roever 2004, p.135</ref> It is generally accepted that nomadic mesolithic hunters and gatherers connected the neolithic farmers of the ] at the Franch-Spanish Mediterranean coast to La Hoguette and Roucadourien through the Rhone-Saône route. To the east, this same genetically related pottery found its way to the steppes and forests of Russia,<ref>De Roever 2004, p.137</ref> where from the 4th millennium BC on peoples from the Pontic-Caspian brought point base pottery from their original riverside habitats even into the steppe and foreststeppe east of the Urals.<ref>Mallory 1989, p.223</ref>
* Pre-] (4200 BC)
* Pre-] (3700 BC)
* ] (3300 BC)
* Pre-Italic and Pre-Celtic (3000 BC)
* Pre-Armenian (2800 BC)
* Pre-Balto-Slavic (2800 BC)
* Pre-Greek (2500 BC)
* Proto-] (2200 BC); split between Iranian and Old Indic 1800 BC


From 1500 BC the following sequence may be given:{{Citation needed|date=November 2019}}
Mesolithic and Neolithic cultures dated according to the attested pottery:
* 1500–1000 BC: The ] of ] develops ], and the (pre-) Proto-Celtic ] and ] cultures emerge in Central Europe, introducing the ]. Migration of the Proto-] speakers into the Italian peninsula (]). ] followed by the redaction of the ]; rise of the ] and ] in the ]. The ] gives way to the ]. Hittite goes extinct. ] start migrating southwards to ]. ] splits into ancestors of modern ] and ].
* 1000–500 BC: The ] spread over Central and Western Europe, including ]. ] are spoken in a huge area from present-day Poland to ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Vijay |first1=John |last2=Slocum |first2=Jonathan |date=10 November 2008 |title=Indo-European Languages: Balto-Slavic Family |publisher=Linguistics Research Center, University of Texas |access-date=7 August 2010 |url=http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie-lg/Balto-Slavic.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604200234/http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie-lg/Balto-Slavic.html |archive-date=4 June 2011 }}</ref> ] gives rise to ] in southern Scandinavia. ] and the beginning of ]. The Vedic civilization gives way to the ] as the Indo-Aryan tongue reaches eastwards, giving rise to the ] cultural sphere, where ] preaches ] and ] preaches ]. ] composes the ], rise of the ], replacing the ] and ]. Separation of Proto-Italic into ], ], and possibly ] and ]. A variety of ] besides Greek are spoken in Southern Europe, including ], ] and ], and in ] (]). Development of ] across the northern Indian subcontinent, as well as migration of Indo-Aryan speakers to ] and the ].
* 500 BC – 1 BC/AD: ]: spread of ] and ] throughout the Mediterranean and, during the ] (]), to Central Asia and the ]. The Magadhan power and influence rises in ancient India, especially with the conquests of the ] and ]s. Germanic speakers start migrating southwards to occupy formerly Celtic territories. ] extend from Eastern Europe (]) to Northwest China (]).
* 1 BC – AD 500: ], ]; attestation of ]. ]. The ] and then the ] marginalize the Celtic languages to the British Isles. ], an ], becomes the '']'' of the ] in Central Asia leading to China, due to the proliferation of ]n merchants there. Greek settlements and ] rule make the last Anatolian languages ]. ] start replacing ].
* 500–1000: ]. The ] forms an Old Norse ] spanning Scandinavia, the British Isles and Iceland. Phrygian becomes extinct. The ] and the ] result in the ] and ] of significant areas where Indo-European languages were spoken, but ] still develops under Islamic rule and extends into ] and ]. Due to further ], ] becomes fully extinct while Scythian languages are overwhelmingly replaced. Slavic languages spread over wide areas in central, eastern and southeastern Europe, largely replacing Romance in the Balkans (with the exception of Romanian) and whatever was left of the ] with the exception of Albanian. Pannonian Basin is taken by the ] from the western ].
* 1000–1500: ]: Attestation of ] and ]. Modern dialects of Indo-European languages start emerging.
* 1500–2000: ] to present: ] results in the spread of Indo-European languages to every habitable continent, most notably ] (North, Central and South America, North and Sub-Saharan Africa, West Asia), ] (] in North America, Sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia and Australia; to a lesser extent Dutch and German), and ] to Central Asia and North Asia.


===Important languages for reconstruction===
<!-- the data may be incorporated in the table below but ins not convenient to edit-->
In reconstructing the history of the Indo-European languages and the form of the ], some languages have been of particular importance. These generally include the ancient Indo-European languages that are both well-attested and documented at an early date, although some languages from later periods are important if they are particularly ] (most notably, ]). Early poetry is of special significance because of the rigid ] normally employed, which makes it possible to reconstruct a number of features (e.g. ]) that were either unwritten or corrupted in the process of transmission down to the earliest extant written ]s.


Most noticeable of all:{{sfn|Beekes|2011|loc=, , , }}
:{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:left; font-size: 90%"
* ] ({{Circa|1500}}–500 BC). This language is unique in that its source documents were all composed orally, and were passed down through ] (] schools) for c. 2,000 years before ever being written down. The oldest documents are all in poetic form; oldest and most important of all is the ] ({{Circa|1500 BC}}).
! Culture||First attested pottery||Source
* ] ({{Circa|750}}–400 BC). ] ({{Circa|1450 BC}}) is the oldest recorded form, but its value is lessened by the limited material, restricted subject matter, and highly ambiguous writing system. More important is Ancient Greek, documented extensively beginning with the two ] (the '']'' and the '']'', {{Circa|750 BC}}).
* ] ({{Circa|1700}}–1200 BC). This is the earliest-recorded of all Indo-European languages, and highly divergent from the others due to the early separation of the ] from the remainder. It possesses some highly archaic features found only fragmentarily, if at all, in other languages. At the same time, however, it appears to have undergone many early phonological and grammatical changes which, combined with the ambiguities of its writing system, hinder its usefulness somewhat.

Other primary sources:
* ], attested in a huge amount of poetic and prose material in the ] period ({{Circa|200 BC}} – AD 100) and limited ] from as early as {{Circa|600 BC}}.
* ] (the most archaic well-documented ], AD {{Circa|350}}), along with the combined witness of the other old Germanic languages: most importantly, ] ({{Circa|800}}–1000), ] ({{Circa|750}}–1000) and ] ({{Circa|1100}}–1300 AD, with limited earlier sources dating to AD {{Circa|200}}).
* ] ({{Circa|1700}}–1200 BC) and ] ({{Circa|900 BC}}). Documentation is sparse, but nonetheless quite important due to its highly archaic nature.
* Modern ], with limited records in ] ({{Circa|1500}}–1700).
* ] ({{Circa|900}}–1000).

Other secondary sources, of lesser value due to poor attestation:
* ], ], ] and other ] ({{Circa|1400}}–400 BC).
* ], ] and other ] languages ({{Circa|600}}–200 BC).
* ] ({{Circa|500 BC}}).
* ] ({{Circa|1350}}–1600); even more archaic than Lithuanian.

Other secondary sources, of lesser value due to extensive phonological changes and relatively limited attestation:{{sfn|Beekes|2011|loc=p. 30, , Arm: 20, Alb: 25 & , }}
* ] (AD{{Circa|700}}–850).
* ] (AD {{Circa|500}}–800 ), underwent large phonetic shifts and mergers in the proto-language, and has an almost entirely reworked declension system.
* ] (AD {{Circa|400}}–1000).<!--<ref name="Strazny2013">{{cite book|author=Philipp Strazny|title=Encyclopedia of Linguistics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=27JOMobauYAC&pg=PA86|date=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-45522-4|page=86}}</ref>-->
* ] ({{Circa|1450}}–current time).

===Sound changes===
{{Main|Indo-European sound laws}}
As the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) language broke up, its sound system diverged as well, changing according to various ]s evidenced in the ]s.

PIE is normally reconstructed with a complex system of 15 ]s, including an unusual three-way ] (]) distinction between ], ] and "]" (i.e. ]) stops, and a three-way distinction among ]s (''k''-type sounds) between "palatal" ''ḱ ǵ ǵh'', "plain velar" ''k g gh'' and ] ''kʷ gʷ gʷh''. (The correctness of the terms ''palatal'' and ''plain velar'' is disputed; see ].) All daughter languages have reduced the number of distinctions among these sounds, often in divergent ways.

As an example, in ], one of the ]s, the following are some of the major changes that happened:
{{ordered list
|1= As in other ] languages, the "plain velar" and "palatal" stops merged, reducing the number of stops from 15 to 12.
|2= As in the other Germanic languages, the ] changed the realization of all stop consonants, with each consonant shifting to a different one:
: {{PIE|bʰ}} → {{PIE|b}} → {{PIE|p}} → {{PIE|f}}
: {{PIE|dʰ}} → {{PIE|d}} → {{PIE|t}} → {{PIE|θ}}
: {{PIE|gʰ}} → {{PIE|g}} → {{PIE|k}} → {{PIE|x}} (Later initial {{PIE|x}} →{{PIE|h}})
: {{PIE|gʷʰ}} → {{PIE|gʷ}} → {{PIE|kʷ}} → {{PIE|xʷ}} (Later initial {{PIE|xʷ}} →{{PIE|hʷ}})
Each original consonant shifted one position to the right. For example, original {{PIE|dʰ}} became {{PIE|d}}, while original {{PIE|d}} became {{PIE|t}} and original {{PIE|t}} became {{PIE|θ}} (written ''th'' in English). This is the original source of the English sounds written ''f'', ''th'', ''h'' and ''wh''. Examples, comparing English with Latin, where the sounds largely remain unshifted:
:For PIE ''p'': ''piscis'' vs. ''fish''; ''pēs, pēdis'' vs. ''foot''; ''pluvium'' "rain" vs. ''flow''; ''pater'' vs. ''father''
:For PIE ''t'': ''trēs'' vs. ''three''; ''māter'' vs. ''mother''
:For PIE ''d'': ''decem'' vs. ''ten''; ''pēdis'' vs. ''foot''; ''quid'' vs. ''what''
:For PIE ''k'': ''centum'' vs. ''hund(red)''; ''capere'' "to take" vs. ''have''
:For PIE ''kʷ'': ''quid'' vs. ''what''; ''quandō'' vs. ''when''
|3= Various further changes affected consonants in the middle or end of a word:
* The voiced stops resulting from the sound shift were softened to voiced ] (or perhaps the sound shift directly generated fricatives in these positions).
* ] also turned some of the voiceless fricatives resulting from the sound shift into voiced fricatives or stops. This is why the ''t'' in Latin ''centum'' ends up as ''d'' in ''hund(red)'' rather than the expected ''th''.
* Most remaining ''h'' sounds disappeared, while remaining ''f'' and ''th'' became voiced. For example, Latin ''decem'' ends up as ''ten'' with no ''h'' in the middle (but note ''taíhun'' "ten" in ], an archaic Germanic language). Similarly, the words ''seven'' and ''have'' have a voiced ''v'' (compare Latin ''septem'', ''capere''), while ''father'' and ''mother'' have a voiced ''th'', although not spelled differently (compare Latin ''pater'', ''māter'').
}}

None of the daughter-language families (except possibly ], particularly ]) reflect the plain velar stops differently from the other two series, and there is even a certain amount of dispute whether this series existed at all in PIE. The major distinction between ] languages corresponds to the outcome of the PIE plain velars:
* The "central" ''satem'' languages (], ], ], and ]) reflect both "plain velar" and labiovelar stops as plain velars, often with secondary ] before a ] (''e i ē ī''). The "palatal" stops are palatalized and often appear as ]s (usually but not always distinct from the secondarily palatalized stops).
* The "peripheral" ''centum'' languages (], ], ], ], ] and ]) reflect both "palatal" and "plain velar" stops as plain velars, while the labiovelars continue unchanged, often with later reduction into plain ] or ]s.

The three-way PIE distinction between voiceless, voiced and voiced aspirated stops is considered extremely unusual from the perspective of ]—particularly in the existence of voiced aspirated stops without a corresponding series of voiceless aspirated stops. None of the various daughter-language families continue it unchanged, with numerous "solutions" to the apparently unstable PIE situation:
* The ]s preserve the three series unchanged but have evolved a fourth series of voiceless aspirated consonants.
* The ]s probably passed through the same stage, subsequently changing the aspirated stops into fricatives.
* ] converted the voiced aspirates into voiceless aspirates.
* ] probably passed through the same stage, but reflects the voiced aspirates as voiceless fricatives, especially ''f'' (or sometimes plain voiced stops in ]).
* ], ], ], and ] merge the voiced aspirated into plain voiced stops.
* ] and ] change all three series in a ] (e.g. with ''bh b p'' becoming ''b p f'' (known as '']'' in Germanic)).

Among the other notable changes affecting consonants are:
* The ] (''s'' becomes {{IPA|/ʃ/}} before ''r, u, k, i'') in the '']'' languages.
* Loss of prevocalic ''p'' in ].
* Development of prevocalic ''s'' to ''h'' in ], with later loss of ''h'' between vowels.
* ] in ].
* ] (dissimilation of aspirates) independently in Proto-Greek and Proto-Indo-Iranian.

The following table shows the basic outcomes of PIE consonants in some of the most important daughter languages for the purposes of reconstruction. For a fuller table, see ].

{| class=wikitable style="white-space: nowrap;"
|+ Proto-Indo-European consonants and their ] in selected Indo-European daughter languages
! rowspan=2|PIE !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|] !! rowspan=2|English !! colspan=6|Examples
!
|- align=center
! PIE !! Eng. !! ] !! ] !! ] !! ] etc.
!].
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*p}}'''
|'''{{PIE|p}}'''; '''{{PIE|ph}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>
| colspan="4"|'''{{PIE|p}}'''
|'''{{PIE|Ø}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|ch}}'''<SUP>T</SUP> {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|f}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|b}}'''- {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|f}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|v/f}}'''-
|''*pṓds ~ *ped-'' || ''foot'' || ''pád-'' || ''poús (podós)'' || ''pēs (pedis)'' || ''pãdas''
|Pi''á''de
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*t}}'''
|'''{{PIE|t}}'''; '''{{PIE|th}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>
| colspan="4"|'''{{PIE|t}}'''
|'''{{PIE|t}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|th}}'''- {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|þ}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />`-'''{{PIE|d}}'''- {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|t}}'''<SUP>T-</SUP>
|'''{{PIE|th}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|d}}'''-;<br />'''{{PIE|t}}'''<SUP>T-</SUP>
|''*tréyes'' || ''three'' || ''tráyas''|| ''treĩs'' || ''trēs'' || ''trỹs''
|thri (old Persian)
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*ḱ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|ś}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|s}}'''
|'''{{PIE|š}}''' {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|k}}'''
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|c}}''' {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="4"|'''{{PIE|c}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-'''{{PIE|ch}}'''- {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|h}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|g}}'''- {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|h}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''-;<br />`-'''{{PIE|y}}'''-
|''*ḱm̥tóm'' || ''hund(red)'' || ''śatám'' || ''he-katón'' || ''centum'' || ''šimtas''
|sad
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*k}}'''
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|k}}'''; '''{{PIE|c}}'''<SUP>E</SUP> {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|kh}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|k}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|č}}'''<SUP>E</SUP> {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|c}}'''<sup>E'</sup> {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|k}}'''
|''*kreuh₂''<br /> "raw meat" || OE ''hrēaw''<br /> ''raw'' || ''kravíṣ-'' || ''kréas'' || ''cruor'' || ''kraûjas''
|xore''š''
|- align=center
!rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|*kʷ}}'''
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|p}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|t}}'''<SUP>E</SUP>;<br />'''{{PIE|k}}'''<SUP>(u)</SUP>
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|qu}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|c}}'''<SUP>(O)</SUP> {{IPA|}}
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|ƕ}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />`-'''{{PIE|gw/w}}'''-
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|wh}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|w}}'''-
| ''*kʷid, kʷod'' || ''what'' || ''kím'' || ''tí'' || ''quid, quod'' ||''kas'', ''kad''
|ce, ci
|- align=center
| ''*kʷekʷlom'' || ''wheel'' || ''cakrá-'' || ''kúklos'' || || ''kãklas''
|carx
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*b}}'''
|'''{{PIE|b}}'''; '''{{PIE|bh}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>
| colspan="4"|'''{{PIE|b}}'''
|'''{{PIE|b}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-'''{{IPA|}}'''-
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|p}}'''
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*d}}'''
|'''{{PIE|d}}'''; '''{{PIE|dh}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>
| colspan="4"|'''{{PIE|d}}'''
|'''{{PIE|d}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|t}}'''
| ''*déḱm̥(t)'' || ''ten'',<br />] ''taíhun'' || ''dáśa'' || ''déka'' || ''decem'' || ''dẽšimt''
|dah
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*ǵ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|j}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|h}}'''<SUP>H</SUP> {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|z}}'''
|'''{{PIE|ž}}''' {{IPA|}}
| colspan="2" rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}'''
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|k}}'''
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|c / k}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|ch}}'''<SUP>E'</SUP>
| ''*ǵénu, *ǵnéu-'' || OE ''cnēo''<br /> ''knee'' || ''jā́nu'' || ''gónu'' || ''genu'' ||
|z''ánu''
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*g}}'''
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|j}}'''<sup>E</sup> {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|gh}}'''<SUP>H</SUP>;<br /> '''{{PIE|h}}'''<SUP>H,E</SUP> {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|ž}}'''<sup>E</sup> {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|dz}}'''<sup>E'</sup>
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}'''
|''*yugóm'' || ''yoke'' || ''yugám'' || ''zugón'' || ''iugum'' || ''jùngas''
|yugh
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*gʷ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|b}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|d}}'''<sup>e</sup>;<br />'''{{PIE|g}}'''<SUP>(u)</SUP>
|'''{{PIE|u}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|gu}}'''<sup>n−</sup> {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|b}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
|'''{{PIE|q}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|qu}}'''
| ''*gʷīw-'' || ''quick''<br />"alive" || ''jīvá-'' || ''bíos'',<br />''bíotos'' || ''vīvus'' || ''gývas''
|ze-
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*bʰ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|bh}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|b}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|b}}'''
|'''{{PIE|ph}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|p}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
|'''{{PIE|f}}'''-;<br />'''{{PIE|b}}'''
|'''{{PIE|b}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-;<br />-'''{{PIE|f}}'''
|'''{{PIE|b}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|v/f}}'''-<SUP>(rl)</SUP>
| ''*bʰéroh₂'' || ''bear'' "carry" || ''bhar-'' || ''phérō'' || ''ferō'' || ] ''berǫ''
|bar-
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*dʰ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|dh}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|d}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|d}}'''
|'''{{PIE|th}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|t}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
|'''{{PIE|f}}'''-;<br />'''{{PIE|d}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|b}}'''<SUP>(r),l,u-</SUP>
|'''{{PIE|d}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
|'''{{PIE|d}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-;<br />-'''{{PIE|þ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|d}}'''
|''*dʰwer-, dʰur-'' || ''door'' || ''dvā́raḥ'' || ''thurā́'' || ''forēs'' || ''dùrys''
|dar
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*ǵʰ}}'''
|'''{{PIE|h}}''' {{IPA|}};<br /> '''{{PIE|j}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
|'''{{PIE|z}}'''
|'''{{PIE|ž}}''' {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|kh}}''';<br /> '''{{PIE|k}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|h}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|h/g}}'''<SUP>R</SUP>
| rowspan="4"|'''{{PIE|g}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|g}}'''- {{IPA|}};<br />-'''{{PIE|g}}''' {{IPA|}}
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|y/w}}'''-<SUP>(rl)</SUP>
| ''*ǵʰans-'' || ''goose'',<br /> ] ''gans'' || ''haṁsáḥ'' || ''khḗn'' || ''(h)ānser'' || ''žąsìs''
|gh''áz''
|- align=center
!'''{{PIE|*gʰ}}'''
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|gh}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|h}}'''<sup>E</sup> {{IPA|}};<br /> '''{{PIE|g}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>;<br /> '''{{PIE|j}}'''<sup>E..Ch</sup>
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|ž}}'''<sup>E</sup> {{IPA|}};<br />'''{{PIE|dz}}'''<sup>E'</sup>
| rowspan="3"|'''{{PIE|g}}'''
|- align=center
!rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|*gʷʰ}}'''
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|ph}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|th}}'''<sup>E</sup>;<br />'''{{PIE|kh}}'''<SUP>(u)</SUP>;<br /> '''{{PIE|p}}'''<sup>..Ch</sup>;<br />'''{{PIE|t}}'''<sup>E..Ch</sup>;<br />'''{{PIE|k}}'''<SUP>(u)..Ch</SUP>
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|f}}'''-;<br />'''{{PIE|g}}''' /<br />-'''{{PIE|u}}'''- {{IPA|}};<br /><sup>n</sup>'''{{PIE|gu}}''' {{IPA|}}
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|b}}'''-;<br />-'''{{PIE|w}}'''-;<br /><sup>n</sup>'''{{PIE|gw}}'''
|rowspan=2|'''{{PIE|g}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|b}}'''-;<br />-'''{{PIE|w}}'''-
| ''*sneigʷʰ-'' || ''snow'' || ''sneha-'' || ''nípha'' || ''nivis'' || ''sniẽgas''
|barf
|- align=center
| ''*gʷʰerm-'' || ??''warm'' || ''gharmáḥ'' || ''thermós'' || ''formus'' || ] ''gar̂me''
|garm
|- align=center
! rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|*s}}'''
| colspan="3"|'''{{PIE|s}}'''
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|h}}'''-;<br />-'''{{PIE|s}}''';<br />'''{{PIE|s}}'''<SUP>(T)</SUP>;<br />-'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''-;<br />{{IPA|}}<SUP>(R)</SUP>
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|s}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|r}}'''-
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|s}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|s}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|z}}'''-
| rowspan="2"|'''{{PIE|s}}''';<br />`-'''{{PIE|r}}'''-
| ''*septḿ̥'' || ''seven'' || ''saptá'' || ''heptá'' || ''septem'' || ''septynì''
|haft
|- align=center
|'''{{PIE|ṣ}}'''<SUP>ruki-</SUP> {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|x}}'''<SUP>ruki-</SUP> {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|š}}'''<SUP>ruki-</SUP> {{IPA|}}
| ''*h₂eusōs''<br />"dawn" || ''east'' || ''uṣā́ḥ'' || ''āṓs'' || ''aurōra'' || ''aušra''
|b''á''xtar
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*m}}'''
| colspan="5"|'''{{PIE|m}}'''
| '''{{PIE|m}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-{{IPA|}}-
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|m}}'''
| ''*mūs'' || ''mouse'' || ''mū́ṣ-'' || ''mũs'' || ''mūs'' || ] ''myšĭ''
|mu''š''
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*-m}}'''
| -'''{{PIE|m}}'''
| -'''{{PIE|˛}}''' {{IPA|}}
| colspan="2"| -'''{{PIE|n}}'''
| -'''{{PIE|m}}'''
| -'''{{PIE|n}}'''
| colspan="2"| -'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''
| ''*ḱm̥tóm'' || ''hund(red)'' || ''śatám'' || ''(he)katón'' || ''centum'' || ] ''simtan''
|sad
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*n}}'''
|'''{{PIE|n}}'''
|'''{{PIE|n}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|˛}}''' {{IPA|}}
| colspan="6"|'''{{PIE|n}}'''
| ''*nokʷt-'' || ''night'' || ''nákt-'' || ''núkt-'' || ''noct-'' || ''naktis''
|n''áštá''
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*l}}'''
|'''{{PIE|r}}''' (dial. '''{{PIE|l}}''')
| colspan="7"|'''{{PIE|l}}'''
| ''*leuk-'' || ''light'' || ''ruc-'' || ''leukós'' || ''lūx'' || ''laũkas''
|ruz
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*r}}'''
| colspan="8"|'''{{PIE|r}}'''
| ''*h₁reudʰ-'' || ''red'' || ''rudhirá-'' || ''eruthrós'' || ''ruber'' || ''raũdas''
|sorx
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*i̯}}'''
| '''{{PIE|y}}''' {{IPA|}}
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|j}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|z}}''' {{IPA|}} /<br />'''{{PIE|h}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''-
|'''{{PIE|i}}''' {{IPA|}};<br />-'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''-
|'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''
|'''{{PIE|j}}'''
|'''{{PIE|y}}'''
|''*yugóm'' || ''yoke'' || ''yugám'' || ''zugón'' || ''iugum'' || ''jùngas''
|yugh
|- align=center
! '''{{PIE|*u̯}}'''
|'''{{PIE|v}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|v}}'''
|'''{{PIE|v}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|w > h / Ø}}'''
|'''{{PIE|u}}''' {{IPA|}}
|'''{{PIE|f}}''';<br />-'''{{PIE|Ø}}'''-
| colspan="2"|'''{{PIE|w}}'''
|''*h₂weh₁n̥to-'' || ''wind'' || ''vā́taḥ'' || ''áenta'' || ''ventus'' || ''vėtra''
|b''ád''
|- |-
! PIE !! ] !! ] !! ] !! ] !! ] !! ] !! ] !! English
! ]
|}
||5450-5000 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>

:Notes:
* '''C'''- At the beginning of a word.
* -'''C'''- Between vowels.
* -'''C''' At the end of a word.
* `-'''C'''- Following an unstressed vowel (]).
* -'''C'''-<sup>(rl)</sup> Between vowels, or between a vowel and '''{{PIE|r, l}}''' (on either side).
* '''C'''<sup>T</sup> Before a (PIE) stop ('''{{PIE|p, t, k}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>T−</sup> After a (PIE) obstruent ('''{{PIE|p, t, k}}''', etc.; '''{{PIE|s}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>(T)</sup> Before or after an obstruent ('''{{PIE|p, t, k}}''', etc.; '''{{PIE|s}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>H</sup> Before an original laryngeal.
* '''C'''<sup>E</sup> Before a (PIE) front vowel ('''{{PIE|i, e}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>E'</sup> Before secondary (post-PIE) front-vowels.
* '''C'''<sup>e</sup> Before '''{{PIE|e}}'''.
* '''C'''<sup>(u)</sup> Before or after a (PIE) '''{{PIE|u}}''' (]).
* '''C'''<sup>(O)</sup> Before or after a (PIE) '''{{PIE|o, u}}''' (]).
* '''C'''<sup>n−</sup> After '''{{PIE|n}}'''.
* '''C'''<sup>R</sup> Before a ] ('''{{PIE|r, l, m, n}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>(R)</sup> Before or after a ] ('''{{PIE|r, l, m, n}}''').
* '''C'''<sup>(r),l,u−</sup> Before '''{{PIE|r, l}}''' or after '''{{PIE|r, u}}'''.
* '''C'''<sup>ruki−</sup> After '''{{PIE|r, u, k, i}}''' (]).
* '''C'''<sup>..Ch</sup> Before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (], also known as ]).
* '''C'''<sup>E..Ch</sup> Before a (PIE) front vowel ('''{{PIE|i, e}}''') as well as before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (], also known as ]).
* '''C'''<sup>(u)..Ch</sup> Before or after a (PIE) '''{{PIE|u}}''' as well as before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (], also known as ]).

===Comparison of conjugations===

The following table presents a comparison of conjugations of the ] ] of the verbal root *{{PIE|bʰer-}} of the English verb '']'' and its reflexes in various early attested IE languages and their modern descendants or relatives, showing that all languages had in the early stage an inflectional verb system.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|+
|- |-
!
! ]
! ]<br /> (*{{PIE|]}} 'to carry, to bear')
||4900-4500 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! I (1st sg.)
! Bischheim culture
| *{{PIE|bʰéroh₂}}
||4500-4375 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! You (2nd sg.)
! Michelsberg I-IV
| *{{PIE|bʰéresi}}
||4350-3400 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! He/She/It (3rd sg.)
! -
| *{{PIE|bʰéreti}}
||-|| -
|- |-
! We two (1st ])
! ], Polderweg 2nd phase
| *{{PIE|bʰérowos}}
||5200-4950 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! You two (2nd dual)
! Hazendonk 1,2,3
| *{{PIE|bʰéreth₁es}}
||4250-3300 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! They two (3rd dual)
! Vlaardingen (Late Mesolithic)
| *{{PIE|bʰéretes}}
||3550-2500 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! We (1st pl.)
! -
| *{{PIE|bʰéromos}}
||-|| -
|- |-
! You (2nd pl.)
! Ertebolle/Ellerbek (Northern Germany)
| *{{PIE|bʰérete}}
||5100-3850 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|- |-
! They (3rd pl.)
! ] (Salpetermosen)
| *{{PIE|bʰéronti}}
||4950-4800 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
|}<!-- Indo-Iranian -->
<!-- Balto-Slavic -->{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|- |-
! rowspan="2" | Major subgroup
! ] (Scandinavia)
! rowspan="2" |]
||4650-3850 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
! colspan="2" |]
! rowspan="2" |]
! rowspan="2" |]
! rowspan="2" |]
! rowspan="2" |]
! colspan="2" |]
! rowspan="2" |]
|- |-
!]
! ], Hüde-Dümmer
!]
||4300-3400 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
!]
!]
|- |-
! Ancient representative
! ], early, Germany & Scandinavia
!]
||4100-3300 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
|- |-
! I (1st sg.)
! ], Drenthe, Westgroup
|]
||3300-2700 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever" />
| bʰárāmi
| barāmi
|]
| biru; berim
| berem
| baíra /bɛra/
| *bera
| berǫ
| *berja
|- |-
! You (2nd sg.)
! -
| phéreis
||-|| -
| bʰárasi
| barahi
| fers
| biri; berir
| beres
| baíris
| *bera
| bereši
| *berje
|- |-
! He/She/It (3rd sg.)
! Ceramic Mesolithic Belgium
| phérei
||4500 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
| bʰárati
| baraiti
| fert
| berid
| berē
| baíriþ
| *bera
| beretъ
| *berjet
|- |-
! We two (1st dual)
! Ceramic Mesolitic France, Roucadourien
| —
||4850-4450 BC|| De Roever, 2004<ref name="Roever"/>
| bʰárāvas
| barāvahi
| —
| —
| —
| baíros
|—
| berevě
|—
|- |-
! You two (2nd dual)
! -
| phéreton
||-|| -
| bʰárathas
| —
| —
| —
| —
| baírats
|—
| bereta
|—
|- |-
! They two (3rd dual)
! Early Dnieper-Donets region
| phéreton
||Early fifth millennium|| Mallory, 1989<ref name="Mallory"/>
| bʰáratas
| baratō
| —
| —
| —
| —
|—
| berete
|—
|- |-
! We (1st pl.)
! Sredny Stog culture
| phéromen
||4500-3500 BC|| Mallory, 1989<ref name="Mallory"/>
| bʰárāmas
| barāmahi
| ferimus
| bermai
| beremkʿ
| baíram
| *beramai
| beremъ
| *berjame
|-
! You (2nd pl.)
| phérete
| bʰáratha
| baraθa
| fertis
| beirthe
| berēkʿ
| baíriþ
| *beratei
| berete
| *berjeju
|-
! They (3rd pl.)
| phérousi
| bʰáranti
| barəṇti
| ferunt
| berait
| beren
| baírand
| *bera
| berǫtъ
| *berjanti
|-
! Modern representative
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
!]
|-
! I (1st sg.)
| férno
| (ma͠i) bʰarūm̥
| (man) {mi}baram
| {con}firo
|]
| berum em; g'perem
| (ich) {ge}bäre
| beriu
| bérem
| (unë) bie
|-
! You (2nd sg.)
| férnis
| (tū) bʰarē
| (tu) {mi}bari
| {con}feres
| beirir
| berum es; g'peres
| (du) {ge}bierst
| beri
| béreš
| (ti) bie
|-
! He/She/It (3rd sg.)
| férni
| (ye/vo) bʰarē
| (ān) {mi}barad
| {con}fere
| beiridh
| berum ē; g'perē
| (er/sie/es) {ge}biert
| beria
| bére
| (ai/ajo) bie
|-
! We two (1st dual)
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
| beriava
| béreva
|—
|-
! You two (2nd dual)
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|beriata
|béreta
|—
|-
! They two (3rd dual)
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
|—
| beria
| béreta
|—
|-
! We (1st pl.)
| férnume
| (ham) bʰarēm̥
| (mā) {mi}barim
| {con}ferimos
| beirimid; beiream
| berum enkʿ; g'perenkʿ
| (wir) {ge}bären
| beriame
| béremo
| (ne) biem
|-
! You (2nd pl.)
| férnete
| (tum) bʰaro
| (šomā) {mi}barid
| {con}feris
| beirthidh
| berum ekʿ; g'perekʿ
| (ihr) {ge}bärt
| beriate
| bérete
| (ju) bini
|-
! They (3rd pl.)
| férnun
| (ye/vo) bʰarēm̥
| (ānān) {mi}barand
| {con}ferem
| beirid
| berum en; g'peren
| (sie) {ge}bären
| beria
| bérejo; berọ́
| (ata/ato) bien
|} |}


While similarities are still visible between the modern descendants and relatives of these ancient languages, the differences have increased over time. Some IE languages have moved from ] verb systems to largely ] systems. In addition, the ]s of periphrastic forms are in parentheses when they appear. Some of these verbs have undergone a change in meaning as well.
Most archeologist accept the hypothesis that the Dnieper-Donets culture was swallowed up by other populations from the steppe (Mallory p.256). Telegin indicates it was assimilated by the Sredny Stog and Yamnaya cultures, while Gimbutas dismiss this culture as a local substrate assimilated by invaders from the Volga-Ural region.
* In ] ''beir'' usually only carries the meaning ''to bear'' in the sense of bearing a child; its common meanings are ''to catch, grab''. Apart from the first person, the forms given in the table above are dialectical or obsolete. The second and third person forms are typically instead conjugated ] by adding a pronoun after the verb: ''beireann tú, beireann sé/sí, beireann sibh, beireann siad''.
* The ] (] and ]) verb ''bʰarnā'', the continuation of the Sanskrit verb, can have a variety of meanings, but the most common is "to fill". The forms given in the table, although etymologically derived from the ], now have the meaning of ].<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=van Olphen |first=Herman |date=1975 |title=Aspect, Tense, and Mood in the Hindi Verb |journal=Indo-Iranian Journal |volume=16 |issue=4 |pages=284–301 |doi=10.1163/000000075791615397 |jstor=24651488 |s2cid=161530848 |issn=0019-7246 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/24651488 |url-access=subscription }}</ref> The loss of the ] in Hindustani is roughly compensated by the periphrastic ] construction, using the ] (etymologically from the Sanskrit present participle ''bʰarant-'') and an auxiliary: ''ma͠i bʰartā hū̃, tū bʰartā hai, vah bʰartā hai, ham bʰarte ha͠i, tum bʰarte ho, ve bʰarte ha͠i'' (masculine forms).
* German is not directly descended from Gothic, but the Gothic forms are a close approximation of what the early West Germanic forms of {{Circa|400 AD}} would have looked like. The descendant of Proto-Germanic ''*beraną'' (English ''bear'') survives in German only in the compound ''gebären'', meaning "bear (a child)".
* The Latin verb ''ferre'' is irregular, and not a good representative of a normal thematic verb. In most Romance languages such as Portuguese, other verbs now mean "to carry" (e.g. Pt. ''portar'' < Lat. ''portare'') and ''ferre'' was borrowed and nativized only in compounds such as {{lang|pt|sofrer}} "to suffer" (from Latin ''sub-'' and ''ferre'') and {{lang|pt|conferir}} "to confer" (from Latin "con-" and "ferre").
* In Modern ], ''phero'' φέρω (modern transliteration ''fero'') "to bear" is still used but only in specific contexts and is most common in such compounds as αναφέρω, διαφέρω, εισφέρω, εκφέρω, καταφέρω, προφέρω, προαναφέρω, προσφέρω etc. The form that is (very) common today is ''pherno'' φέρνω (modern transliteration ''ferno'') meaning "to bring". Additionally, the perfective form of ''pherno'' (used for the subjunctive voice and also for the future tense) is also ''phero''.
* The dual forms are archaic in standard Lithuanian, and are only presently used in some dialects (e.g. ]).
* Among modern Slavic languages, only Slovene continues to have a dual number in the standard variety.


== Comparison of cognates ==
The Paleolithic Continuity hypothesis proposes a reversal of the Kurgan hypothesis and largely identifies the Indo-Europeans with Gimbutas "Old Europe"<ref>Marija Gimbutas - Old Europe c.7000-3500 BC., the earliest European cultures before the infiltration of the Indo-European peoples, «Journal of Indo-European Studies» 1, 1973, pp.1-20</ref>, while it reassigning the Kurgan culture - traditionally considered early Indo-European - to a people of predominantly mixed Uralic and Turkic stock. The proof of this is sought in the tentative linguistic identification of ]s as a ], proto-Hungarian people that already underwent strong proto-Turkish influence in the third millennium BC<ref>Mario Alinei, Etruscan: An Archaic Form of Hungarian, Il Mulino, Bologna, 2003; summary: </ref> when Pontic invasions would have brought this people to the Carpatian basin. A subsequent migration of ] signature around 1250 BC triggered this ethnic group to expand south in a general movement of people, attested by the upheaval of the ] and the overthrow of an earlier Italic substrate at the onset of the "Etruscan" ].
{{Main|Indo-European vocabulary}}
{{See also|Proto-Indo-European numerals}}


==Present distribution==
It should be noted that the Continuity Theory does not supply migration models to tie this related prehistoric cultures together, and assume local continuity to each until an alternative theory provides irrefutable counter-evidence. The initial prehistoric dispersal pattern of the Indo-European languages is tied instead to a process of regional depopulation followed by repopulation in a "sparse wave" scenario of hunter-gatherers, migrating rapidly out of a refugial area to account for a disproportionate contribution to the genetic and linguistic legacy of the region. This is proposed to have happened at the end of the coldest part of the Younger Dryas (around 10,800-9,400 cal. BC) or later, following the cold event at 6.200 cal BC.<ref>Jonathan Adams & Marcel Otte, ''Did Indo-European Languages spread before farming?'', ] 40, No. 1. (Feb., 1999), 73-77. </ref>
[[File:Indo-European distribution.png|thumb|upright=1.55|
{{legend|#0026ff|Countries where Indo-European language family is majority native}}
{{legend|#0094ff|Countries where Indo-European language family is official but not majority native}}
{{legend|#c0c0c0|Countries where Indo-European language family is not official}}]]
]
<br>
]:
{{Legend|#4CC200|]}}
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]]


Today, Indo-European languages are spoken by billions of ] across all inhabited continents,<ref>{{cite web |title=Ethnologue list of language families |publisher=] |edition=22nd |date=25 May 2019 |access-date=2 July 2019 |url=http://www.ethnologue.com/ethno_docs/distribution.asp?by=family |url-access=subscription}}</ref> the largest number by far for any recognised language family. Of the ] according to ''Ethnologue'', 10 are Indo-European: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], each with 100 million speakers or more.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ethnologue list of languages by number of speakers |date=3 October 2018 |publisher=] |access-date=29 July 2021 |url=http://www.ethnologue.com/ethno_docs/distribution.asp?by=size |url-access=subscription}}</ref> Additionally, hundreds of millions of persons worldwide study Indo-European languages as secondary or tertiary languages, including in cultures which have completely different language families and historical backgrounds—there are around 600 million<ref>{{cite web |title=English |publisher=] |access-date=17 January 2017 |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/eng |url-access=subscription }}</ref><!-- and one&nbsp;billion<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2015/08/ten-things-you-might-not-have-known-about-the-english-language/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150813233120/http://blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2015/08/ten-things-you-might-not-have-known-about-the-english-language/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=13 August 2015 |title=Ten Things You Might Not Have Known About the English Language| publisher=]|date=12 August 2015}}</ref> L2--> learners of English alone.
Concerning paleoanthropology, the physical type of the Dnieper-Donets population has been predominantly characterized as late Cro-Magnons with more massive and robust features than the gracile Mediterranean peoples of the Balkan Neolithic.<ref>Mallory 1989, p.191</ref> This corresponds to the robust physical type of other Mesolithic wetland and fishing cultures, like Ertebølle and Swifterbant<ref>Raemaekers, D.C.M., 1999, The articulation of a 'New Neolithic'. The meaning of the Swifterbant Culture for the process of neolithisation in the western part of the North European Plain (4900-3400 BC). Archeological Series Leiden University 3. Dissertation Leiden;Verhart, L.B.M.,2000. Times fade away. The neolithization of the southern Netherlands in an anthropological and geograpical perspective. Dissertation Leiden</ref>.


The success of the language family, including the large number of speakers and the vast portions of the Earth that they inhabit, is due to several factors. The ancient ] and widespread dissemination of ] throughout ], including that of the ] themselves, and that of their daughter cultures including the ], ], ], ], ], ], and ], led to these peoples' branches of the language family already taking a dominant foothold in virtually all of ] except for swathes of the ], ] and ], replacing many (but not all) of the previously-spoken ] of this extensive area. However ] remain dominant in much of the ] and ], and ] in much of the ] region. Similarly in ] and the ] the ] (such as Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian etc.) remain, as does ], a pre-Indo-European isolate.
==== Anatolian hypothesis ====
{{main | Anatolian hypothesis}}


Despite being unaware of their common linguistic origin, diverse groups of Indo-European speakers continued to culturally dominate and often replace the indigenous languages of the western two-thirds of Eurasia. By the beginning of the ], Indo-European peoples controlled almost the entirety of this area: the Celts western and central Europe, the Romans southern Europe, the Germanic peoples northern Europe, the Slavs eastern Europe, the Iranian peoples most of western and central Asia and parts of eastern Europe, and the Indo-Aryan peoples in the ], with the ] inhabiting the Indo-European frontier in western China. By the medieval period, only the ], ], ], and ], and the language isolate ] remained of the (relatively) ] and the western half of Asia.
] in ] suggested <ref> {{cite book | last = Renfrew | first = Colin | authorlink = Colin Renfrew | title = Archeology and Language | publisher = Jonathan Cape | year = 1987 | id = ISBN 0-521-38675-6 }} </ref> an association between the spread of Indo-European and the ], spreading peacefully into Europe from ] (Anatolia) from around ] with the advance of farming (''wave of advance''). Accordingly, all the inhabitants of ] would have spoken Indo-European tongues, and the Kurgan migrations would at best have replaced Indo-European dialects with other Indo-European dialects.


Despite medieval invasions by ], a group to which the Proto-Indo-Europeans had once belonged, Indo-European expansion reached another peak in the ] with the dramatic increase in the population of the ] and European expansionism throughout the globe during the ], as well as the continued replacement and assimilation of surrounding non-Indo-European languages and peoples due to increased state centralization and ]. These trends compounded throughout the modern period due to the general global ] and the results of ] of the ] and ], leading to an explosion in the number of Indo-European speakers as well as the territories inhabited by them.
According to Renfrew <ref> {{cite book | last = Renfrew | first = Colin | year = 2003 | chapter = Time Depth, Convergence Theory, and Innovation in Proto-Indo-European | title = Languages in Prehistoric Europe | id = ISBN 3-8253-1449-9 }} </ref>, the spread of Indo-European proceeded from "Pre-Proto-Indo-European" in 6500 to Archaic PIE in 5000 BC, with the historical Indo-European families developing from 3000 BC from "Balkan PIE".


Due to colonization and the modern dominance of Indo-European languages in the fields of politics, global science, technology, education, finance, and sports, even many modern countries whose populations largely speak non-Indo-European languages have Indo-European languages as official languages, and the majority of the global population speaks at least one Indo-European language. The overwhelming majority of ] are Indo-European, with ] continuing to lead the group; English in general has in many respects ] of global communication.
The main strength of the farming hypothesis lies in its linking of the spread of Indo-European languages with an archeologically known event that likely involved major population shifts: the spread of farming (though the validity of basing a linguistics theory on archeological evidence remains disputed).


{{Clear}}
While the Anatolian theory enjoyed brief support when first proposed, the linguistic community in general now rejects it. While the spread of farming undisputedly constituted an important event, most see no case to connect it with Indo-Europeans in particular, since terms for animal husbandry tend to have much better reconstructions than terms related to agriculture.


==See also==
The time frame of the Anatolian hypothesis moved 2000 years closer to postulated by PCT time frame, by a 2003 computer analysis in ]<ref>Gray, R. D. and Atkinson, Q. D. (2003) Language-tree divergence times support the Anatolian theory of Indo-European origin. Nature, 426(6965), 435-439. Quote: ''Languages, like genes, provide vital clues about human history'', URL:http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v426/n6965/abs/nature02029.html</ref> The rate of change calculated is 9,800-8,000 years BP, for ] division at 6700 BCE, and a ] division at 5300 BCE, about few millennia earlier for a Kurgan time frame and one or two earlier than suggested originally by Colin Renfrew as 7000 BC.
{{col div|colwidth=20em}}

* ]
==== Kurgan hypothesis ====
* '']'' (book)
{{main | Kurgan hypothesis}}
* ]
The Kurgan hypothesis was introduced by ] in ] in order to combine ] with ] in locating the origins of the ] (PIE) speaking peoples. She tentatively named the set of cultures in question "]" after the Russian term for their distinctive ]s and traced their diffusion into ].
* ]

* ]
This hypothesis has had a significant impact on ]. Those scholars who follow Gimbutas identify a ''Kurgan'' or '']'' as reflecting an early ] ]ity which existed in the ] and ] from the ] to ] millennia BC.
* ]

* ]
While Gimbutas pointed primarily at the kurgan-ridden Pit Grave- or ] to be at the origin of all Indo-European migrations and Indo-Europeanization, recently there exists a tendency to push the date of origin further back in time. In a revised Kurgan hypothesis rather the kurgan-less ] has been proposed to be ancestral to all Indo-European languages instead, and the subsequently evolving Yamna culture to be related to the later satemization process<ref name=Kortlandt>Frederik Kortlandt-The spread of the Indo-Europeans, 2002,</ref>.
* ]

* ]
==== Armenian hypotheses ====
* ]

* ]
The ] of ] and ] in ] placed the Indo-European homeland on ] <ref> {{cite book | last = Gamkrelidze | first = Tamaz V. | coauthors = Vjacheslav V. Ivanov | title = Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans | publisher = Mouton de Gruyter | year = 1995 | id = ISBN 3-11-014728-9 }} </ref>, suggesting that ] stayed in the Indo-European cradle while other Indo-European languages left the homeland and migrated on a route that led them along the eastern coast of the ] to the steppe north of the Black Sea. Gamkrelidze and Ivanov also originated the ].
* ]

* ]
A recent study (Gray & Atkinson) that applied the statistical tools used in timing genetic evolution to the lexical evolution of Indo-European languages strongly implied that the Indo-European homeland indeed appears to be in Asia Minor, and Armenian language (hence a well-defined group speaking it) split from it (along with Greek) at around 5300 BC, and split from Greek shortly thereafter (but the "split" from Greek was statistically less obvious).<ref name="psych">{{cite web | url= http://www.psych.auckland.ac.nz/psych/research/Evolution/Gray&Atkinson2003.pdf |title= ''Language-tree divergence times support the Anatolian theory of Indo-European origin'' Russell D. Gray and Quentin D. Atkinson, Nature 426, 435-439|accessdate=2007-02-27}}</ref>
* ]

* ]
==== Other hypotheses ====
* ]

{{colend}}
An ] is sometimes advanced, mostly by Indian authors, who see the ] as the location of either Proto-Indo-European or of ].

Various nationalistic European groups in the 19th and early 20th centuries espoused other theories, typically locating Proto-Indo-European in the respective authors' own countries. For example, a suggested location of the proto-language in Northern Europe became involved in justifying the view of the German people as "]".


== Notes ==
Some people have pointed to the ], dating the genesis of the ] to ca. ], as a direct cause of Indo-European expansion.<ref>Ryan and Pitman 1998:208-213</ref> This event occurred in still clearly Neolithic times and happened rather too early to fit with Kurgan archaeology. One can still imagine it as an event in the remote past of the ], with the people living on the land now beneath the Sea of Azov as possible pre-Proto-Indo-Europeans.
{{NoteFoot}}

A recent version of the hypothesis of European origin of PIE is the "]" proposed by Italian theorists, which derives Indo-European languages from the ] ] cultures, arguing for linguistic continuity from genetic continuity.

Recent linguistic studies present strong evidence that the Indo-European language group originates in ]. <ref>A History of Armenia by Vahan M. Kurkjian </ref>


== References == == References ==
===Bibliography=== === Citations ===
{{Reflist}}
*{{cite book | last = Mallory | first = J. P. | title = In Search of the Indo-Europeans | publisher = Thames and Hudson | year = 1989 | id = ISBN 0-500-27616-1}}
* ], ''A Compendium of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-European Languages'' (1861/62).
* {{cite book | last = Watkins | first = Calvert | title = The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots | publisher = Houghton Mifflin | year = 2000 | id = ISBN 0-618-08250-6 }}
* ] (1994). ''A comparative study of Santali and Bengali''. Calcutta: K.P. Bagchi & Co. ISBN 8170741289


=== Notes === === Sources ===
{{reflist}} {{refbegin}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |author=AA.VV. |date=1981 |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |title=Indo-European languages |volume=22 |edition=15th |publisher=Helen Hemingway Benton |location=Chicago |ref=CITEREFEncyclopædia Britannica1981 }}
* {{cite book | last = Anthony | first = David W. | title = The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World | publisher = Princeton University Press | year = 2007 | isbn =978-0-691-05887-0 }}
* {{cite book |last=Auroux |first=Sylvain |title=History of the Language Sciences |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |location=Berlin |date=2000 |isbn=978-3-11-016735-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yasNy365EywC&q=3110167352&pg=PA1156 }}
* {{cite book |last=Beekes |first=Robert S. P. |author-link=Robert S. P. Beekes |date=1995 |translator-last1=Vertalers |translator-first1=Uva |translator-last2=Gabriner |translator-first2=Paul |title=Comparative Indo-European Linguistics: An Introduction |edition=1st |location=Amsterdam / Philadelphia |publisher=John Benjamins |isbn=9027221510 }}
* {{cite book |last=Beekes |first=Robert S. P. |author-link=Robert S. P. Beekes |others=Revised and corrected by ] |date=2011 |title=Comparative Indo-European linguistics : An Introduction |edition=2nd |location=Amsterdam / Philadelphia |publisher=John Benjamins |isbn=978-9027285003 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W-HXnIG75PYC }} Paperback: {{ISBN|978-9027211866}}.
* {{cite book |last=Brugmann |first=Karl |author-link=Karl Brugmann |date=1886 |title=Grundriss der Vergleichenden Grammatik der indogermanischen Sprachen |volume=Erster Band |location=Strassburg |publisher=Karl J. Trübner |language=de }}
* {{cite book |last=Collinge |first=N.E. |date=1985 |title=The Laws of Indo-European |location=Amsterdam |publisher=John Benjamins |isbn=9789027235305 |url=https://archive.org/details/lawsofindoeurope0000coll |url-access=registration }}
* {{cite book | last=Fortson | first=Benjamin W. | title=Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction |location=Malden, Massachusetts | publisher=Blackwell | year=2004 | isbn=978-1-4051-0315-2 }}
* {{cite book |last=Hamp |first=Eric |date=2007 |title=Studime krahasuese për shqipen |trans-title=Comparative studies on Albanian |editor=Rexhep Ismajli |publisher=Akademia e Shkencave dhe e Arteve e Kosovës, Prishtinë |language=sq }}
* {{cite book |last=Holm |first=Hans J. |date=2008 |chapter=The Distribution of Data in Word Lists and its Impact on the Subgrouping of Languages |chapter-url=http://www.hjholm.de/ |editor1-last=Preisach |editor1-first=Christine |editor2-last=Burkhardt |editor2-first=Hans |editor3-last=Schmidt-Thieme |editor3-first=Lars |editor4-last=Decker |editor4-first=Reinhold |display-editors=3 |title=Data analysis, machine learning and applications |series=Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the German Classification Society (GfKl), University of Freiburg, 7–9 March 2007 |location=Heidelberg / Berlin |publisher=Springer-Verlag |isbn=978-3-540-78239-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/springer_10.1007-978-3-540-78246-9 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Kortlandt |first=Frederik |date=1988 |title=The Thraco-Armenian consonant shift |journal=Linguistique Balkanique |volume=31 |pages=71–4 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Kortlandt |first=Frederik |date=1990 |orig-date=1989 |title=The Spread of the Indo-Europeans |journal=Journal of Indo-European Studies |volume=18 |issue=1–2 |pages=131–40 |url=http://www.kortlandt.nl/publications/art111e.pdf }}
* {{cite journal |last=Lubotsky |first=A. |date=1988 |title=The Old Phrygian Areyastis-inscription |journal=Kadmos |volume=27 |pages=9–26 |doi=10.1515/kadmos-1988-0103 |hdl=1887/2660 |s2cid=162944161 |hdl-access=free |url=https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/2660/299_011.pdf }}
* {{cite book |last=Porzig |first=Walter |date=1954 |title=Die Gliederung des indogermanischen Sprachgebiets |publisher=Carl Winter Universitätsverlag |location=Heidelberg }}
* {{cite book |last=Renfrew |first=C. |author-link=Colin Renfrew |date=2001 |chapter=The Anatolian origins of Proto-Indo-European and the autochthony of the Hittites |editor-first=R. |editor-last=Drews |editor-link=Robert Drews |title=Greater Anatolia and the Indo-Hittite language family |location=Washington, DC |publisher=Institute for the Study of Man |isbn=978-0941694773 }}
* {{cite book |last=Ringe |first=Don |date=2006 |title=From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-928413-X |url=https://archive.org/details/anglosaxondictionary_202001/From%20Proto-Indo-European%20to%20Proto-Germanic/mode/2up}}
* {{cite book |last=Schleicher |first=August |author-link=August Schleicher |date=1861 |title=Compendium der vergleichenden Grammatik der indogermanischen Sprachen |location=Weimar |publisher=Böhlau (reprinted by Minerva GmbH, Wissenschaftlicher Verlag) |isbn=978-3-8102-1071-5 |language=de }}
* {{cite book |last=Schleicher |first=August |author-link=August Schleicher |date=1874–1877 |translator-first=Herbert |translator-last=Bendall |title=A Compendium of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-European, Sanskrit, Greek and Latin languages |series=Part I and Part II |location=London |publisher=Trübner & Co. |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.13063/page/n2 |url-access=registration }} .
* {{cite journal |last=Szemerényi |first=Oswald John Louis |author-link=Oswald Szemerényi |date=1957 |title=The Problem of Balto-Slav Unity: A Critical Survey |journal=Kratylos |volume=2 |pages=97–123 |publisher=O. Harrassowitz }}
** Reprinted in {{cite book |last1=Szemerényi |first1=Oswald John Louis |date=1991 |title=Scripta Minora: Selected Essays in Indo-European, Greek, and Latin |volume=IV: Indo-European Languages other than Latin and Greek |publisher=Institut für Sprachwissenschaft der Universität Innsbruck |series=Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft |editor1-first=P. |editor1-last=Considine |editor2-first=James T. |editor2-last=Hooker |isbn=9783851246117 |issn=1816-3920 |pages=2145–2171}}
* {{cite book |last1=Szemerényi |first1=Oswald John Louis |author-link=Oswald Szemerényi |first2=David |last2=Jones |first3=Irene |last3=Jones |date=1999 |title=Introduction to Indo-European Linguistics |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-823870-6 }}
* {{cite book |title=Über Methode und Ergebnisse der arischen (indogermanischen) Alterthumswissenshaft |first=Peter |last=von Bradke |language=de |date=1890 |location=Giessen |publisher=J. Ricker'che Buchhandlung }}
{{refend}}


== See also == ==Further reading==
* {{cite journal |last=Bjørn |first=Rasmus G. |title=Indo-European Loanwords and Exchange in Bronze Age Central and East Asia |journal=Evolutionary Human Sciences |date=2022 |volume=4 |pages=e23 |doi=10.1017/ehs.2022.16 |pmid=37599704 |pmc=10432883 |s2cid=248358873 |doi-access=free }}
* {{cite book |author-link=Byomkes Chakrabarti |last=Chakrabarti |first=Byomkes |date=1994 |title=A Comparative Study of Santali and Bengali |location=Calcutta |publisher=K. P. Bagchi & Co. |isbn= 978-81-7074-128-2}}
* {{cite book |author-link=Pierre Chantraine |last=Chantraine |first=Pierre |date=1968 |url=https://archive.org/details/Dictionnaire-Etymologique-Grec |title=Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque |url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive |location=Paris |publisher=Klincksieck }}
* {{Cite book |title=The Kurgan Culture and The Indo-Europeanization of Europe |last=Gimbutas |first=Marija |date=1997 |isbn=0-941694-56-9 |url=https://www.jies.org/DOCS/monojpgs/Mon18.html |editor-last=Robbins Dexter |editor-first=Miriam |series=JIES Monograph |volume=18 |author-link=Marija Gimbutas |editor-last2=Jones-Bley |editor-first2=Karlene}}
* {{Cite book |title=Talking Neolithic: Proceedings of the Workshop on Indo-European Origins held at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, December 2–3, 2013 |date=2018 |isbn=978-0-9983669-2-0 |url=https://www.jies.org/DOCS/monojpgs/Mon65.html |editor-last=Kroonen |editor-first=Guus |series=JIES Monograph |volume=65 |editor-last2=Mallory |editor-first2=James P. |editor-last3=Comrie |editor-first3=Bernard}}
* {{cite book |author-link=J. P. Mallory |last=Mallory |first=J.P. |date=1989 |title=In Search of the Indo-Europeans |url=https://archive.org/details/insearchofindoeu00jpma |via=Internet Archive |url-access=registration |location=London |publisher=Thames and Hudson |isbn=978-0-500-27616-7}}
* {{Cite book |title=Revisiting Dispersions Celtic and Germanic ca. 400 BC – ca. 400 AD Proceedings of the International Interdisciplinary Conference held at Dolenjski muzej, Novo mesto, Slovenia; October 12th – 14th, 2018 |date=2020 |isbn=978-0-9845353-7-8 |url=https://www.jies.org/DOCS/monojpgs/Mon67.html |editor-last=Markey |editor-first=T. L. |series=JIES Monograph |volume=67 |editor-last2=Repanšek |editor-first2=Luka}}
* {{cite book |authorlink=Antoine Meillet |last=Meillet |first=Antoine |title=Esquisse d'une grammaire comparée de l'arménien classique |date=1936 |edition=2nd |url=https://archive.org/details/esquissedunegram0000meil |url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive |publisher=] |location=Vienna }}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Olander |editor1-first=Thomas |title=The Indo-European Language Family : A Phylogenetic Perspective |date=September 2022 |doi=10.1017/9781108758666 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781108758666|s2cid=161016819 |s2cid-access=free }}
* {{cite book |editor-last1 = Ramat |editor-first1 = Paolo |editor-last2 = Giacalone Ramat |editor-first2 = Anna |date=1998 |title=The Indo-European Languages |location=London |isbn= 041506449X |publisher=Routledge}}
* {{cite journal |last=Remys |first=Edmund |title=General distinguishing features of various Indo-European languages and their relationship to Lithuanian |journal=Indogermanische Forschungen |issn=0019-7262 |volume=112 |date=17 December 2007 |issue=2007 |pages=244–276 |doi=10.1515/9783110192858.1.244 |isbn=9783110192858 |s2cid=169996117 }}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Strazny |editor1-first=Philip |editor2-last = Trask |editor2-first = R. L. |editor2-link = Larry Trask |date=2000 |title=Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics |publisher=Routledge |edition=1 |isbn=978-1-57958-218-0 }}
* {{cite book |last = Watkins |first = Calvert |author-link=Calvert Watkins |title = The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots |publisher = Houghton Mifflin |date=2000 |isbn = 978-0-618-08250-6 }}
*Asadpour, Hiwa, and Thomas Jügel, eds. Word Order Variation: Semitic, Turkic and Indo-European Languages in Contact. Vol. 31. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, 2022.


==External links==
* ]
* ] {{commons category|Indo-European languages}}
* ] {{EB1911 poster|Indo-European Languages}}
{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Indo-European languages
* ]
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
* ]
*
* ]
* ]


== External links ==
===Databases=== ===Databases===
* {{cite web|title=Comparative Indo-European|url=http://www.wordgumbo.com/ie/cmp/|first1=Isidore|last1=Dyen|first2=Joseph|last2= Kruskal|first3=Paul|last3=Black|date=1997|access-date=13 December 2009|publisher=wordgumbo}}
*
* {{cite web|title=Indo-European|url=http://languageserver.uni-graz.at/ls/group?id=4|publisher=LLOW Languages of the World|access-date=14 December 2009|archive-date=10 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171010183735/http://languageserver.uni-graz.at/ls/group?id=4|url-status=dead}}
*
* {{cite web|title=Indo-European Documentation Center |url=http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie.html |publisher=Linguistics Research Center, ] |date=2009 |access-date=14 December 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090903062241/http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/iedocctr/ie.html |archive-date=3 September 2009 }}
* at the LLOW-database
* {{Cite book|editor-last=Lewis|editor-first=M. Paul|date=2009|title=Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Online version|edition=Sixteenth|location=Dallas, Tex.|publisher=SIL International|contribution=Language Family Trees: Indo-European|url=http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=2-16}}.
* at the ]
* Collection of IE scholarly materials * {{cite web|title=Thesaurus Indogermanischer Text- und Sprachmaterialien: TITUS|url=http://titus.uni-frankfurt.de/indexe.htm |date=2003 |publisher=TITUS, University of Frankfurt|language=de|access-date=13 December 2009}}
* {{cite web|title=Indo-European Lexical Cognacy Database (IELex) |date=2021|url=https://github.com/evotext/ielex-data-and-tree|publisher=Uppsala University, Uppsala}}
* A site of joint resource of Indo-European languages, history, archaeology and religion.
* , an online collection of introductory videos to Ancient Indo-European languages produced by the University of Göttingen
===Lexicon===
*, from the '']''.
* (by Andi Zeneli)
===Images===
*
*


===Lexica===
]
* {{cite web|title=Indo-European Etymological Dictionary (IEED) |url=http://www.indoeuropean.nl |publisher=Department of Comparative Indo-European Linguistics, Leiden University |location=Leiden, Netherlands |access-date=14 December 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060207135952/http://www.indoeuropean.nl/ |archive-date=7 February 2006 }}
* {{cite book|title=The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language |edition=Fourth |orig-year=2000 |chapter=Indo-European Roots Index |date=22 August 2008 |publisher=Internet Archive: Wayback Machine |chapter-url=http://www.bartleby.com/61/IEroots.html |access-date=9 December 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090217023123/http://bartleby.com/61/IEroots.html |archive-date=17 February 2009 }}
* {{cite book |last=Köbler |first=Gerhard|title=Indogermanisches Wörterbuch |url=http://www.koeblergerhard.de/idgwbhin.html |edition=5th |date=2014 |publisher=Gerhard Köbler |language=de |access-date=29 March 2015}}
* {{cite web |last=Schalin |first=Johan |title=Lexicon of Early Indo-European Loanwords Preserved in Finnish |url=http://www.iki.fi/jschalin/?cat=10 |publisher=Johan Schalin |date=2009 |access-date=9 December 2009}}


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Latest revision as of 07:01, 27 December 2024

Language family native to Eurasia "Indo-European" redirects here. For Eurasian people living in or connected with Indonesia, see Indo people. For other uses, see Indo-European (disambiguation).

Indo-European
Geographic
distribution
Worldwide
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Proto-languageProto-Indo-Hittite?
  • Proto-Indo-European
Subdivisions
Language codes
ISO 639-2 / 5ine
Glottologindo1319
Present-day distribution of Indo-European languages in Eurasia:   Albanoid (Albanian)   Armenian   Baltic (East)   Slavic  Celtic (Brittonic and Goidelic)   Germanic (North and West)   Hellenic (Greek)   Iranian   Indo-Aryan   Nuristani   Italic (Romance)   Non-Indo-European languages Dotted/striped areas indicate where multilingualism is common (more visible upon full enlargement of the map).
Notes
  • indicates this branch of the language family is extinct
Part of a series on
Indo-European topics
Languages

Extant
Extinct

Reconstructed

Hypothetical

Grammar

Other
Philology
Origins
Mainstream

Alternative and fringe
Archaeology
Chalcolithic (Copper Age)

Pontic Steppe

Caucasus

East Asia

Eastern Europe

Northern Europe


Bronze Age

Pontic Steppe

Northern/Eastern Steppe

Europe

South Asia


Iron Age

Steppe

Europe

Caucasus

India

Peoples and societies
Bronze Age
Iron Age

Indo-Aryans

Iranians

East Asia

Europe

Middle Ages

East Asia

Europe

Indo-Aryan

Iranian

Religion and mythology
Reconstructed

Historical

Indo-Aryan

Iranian

Others

European

Practices
Indo-European studies
Scholars
Institutes
Publications

The Indo-European languages are a language family native to the northern Indian subcontinent, the overwhelming majority of Europe, and the Iranian plateau. Some European languages of this family—English, French, Portuguese, Russian, Dutch, and Spanish—have expanded through colonialism in the modern period and are now spoken across several continents. The Indo-European family is divided into several branches or sub-families, of which there are eight groups with languages still alive today: Albanian, Armenian, Balto-Slavic, Celtic, Germanic, Hellenic, Indo-Iranian, and Italic; another nine subdivisions are now extinct.

Today, the individual Indo-European languages with the most native speakers are English, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Hindustani, Bengali, Punjabi, French and German each with over 100 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction.

In total, 46% of the world's population (3.2 billion people) speaks an Indo-European language as a first language—by far the highest of any language family. There are about 445 living Indo-European languages, according to an estimate by Ethnologue, with over two-thirds (313) of them belonging to the Indo-Iranian branch.

All Indo-European languages are descended from a single prehistoric language, linguistically reconstructed as Proto-Indo-European, spoken sometime during the Neolithic or early Bronze Age. The geographical location where it was spoken, the Proto-Indo-European homeland, has been the object of many competing hypotheses; the academic consensus supports the Kurgan hypothesis, which posits the homeland to be the Pontic–Caspian steppe in what is now Ukraine and southern Russia, associated with the Yamnaya culture and other related archaeological cultures during the 4th millennium BC to early 3rd millennium BC. By the time the first written records appeared, Indo-European had already evolved into numerous languages spoken across much of Europe, South Asia, and part of Western Asia. Written evidence of Indo-European appeared during the Bronze Age in the form of Mycenaean Greek and the Anatolian languages of Hittite and Luwian. The oldest records are isolated Hittite words and names—interspersed in texts that are otherwise in the unrelated Akkadian language, a Semitic language—found in texts of the Assyrian colony of Kültepe in eastern Anatolia dating to the 20th century BC. Although no older written records of the original Proto-Indo-European population remain, some aspects of their culture and their religion can be reconstructed from later evidence in the daughter cultures. The Indo-European family is significant to the field of historical linguistics as it possesses the second-longest recorded history of any known family, after the Afroasiatic Egyptian language and Semitic languages. The analysis of the family relationships between the Indo-European languages, and the reconstruction of their common source, was central to the development of the methodology of historical linguistics as an academic discipline in the 19th century.

The Indo-European language family is not considered by the current academic consensus in the field of linguistics to have any genetic relationships with other language families, although several disputed hypotheses propose such relations.

History of Indo-European linguistics

See also: Indo-European studies § History

During the 16th century, European visitors to the Indian subcontinent began to notice similarities among Indo-Aryan, Iranian, and European languages. In 1583, English Jesuit missionary and Konkani scholar Thomas Stephens wrote a letter from Goa to his brother (not published until the 20th century) in which he noted similarities between Indian languages and Greek and Latin.

Another account was made by Filippo Sassetti, a merchant born in Florence in 1540, who travelled to the Indian subcontinent. Writing in 1585, he noted some word similarities between Sanskrit and Italian (these included devaḥ/dio "God", sarpaḥ/serpe "serpent", sapta/sette "seven", aṣṭa/otto "eight", and nava/nove "nine"). However, neither Stephens' nor Sassetti's observations led to further scholarly inquiry.

In 1647, Dutch linguist and scholar Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn noted the similarity among certain Asian and European languages and theorized that they were derived from a primitive common language that he called Scythian. He included in his hypothesis Dutch, Albanian, Greek, Latin, Persian, and German, later adding Slavic, Celtic, and Baltic languages. However, Van Boxhorn's suggestions did not become widely known and did not stimulate further research.

Ottoman Turkish traveler Evliya Çelebi visited Vienna in 1665–1666 as part of a diplomatic mission and noted a few similarities between words in German and in Persian. Gaston Coeurdoux and others made observations of the same type. Coeurdoux made a thorough comparison of Sanskrit, Latin, and Greek conjugations in the late 1760s to suggest a relationship among them. Meanwhile, Mikhail Lomonosov compared different language groups, including Slavic, Baltic ("Kurlandic"), Iranian ("Medic"), Finnish, Chinese, "Hottentot" (Khoekhoe), and others, noting that related languages (including Latin, Greek, German, and Russian) must have separated in antiquity from common ancestors.

The hypothesis reappeared in 1786 when Sir William Jones first lectured on the striking similarities among three of the oldest languages known in his time: Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit, to which he tentatively added Gothic, Celtic, and Persian, though his classification contained some inaccuracies and omissions. In one of the most famous quotations in linguistics, Jones made the following prescient statement in a lecture to the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1786, conjecturing the existence of an earlier ancestor language, which he called "a common source" but did not name:

The Sanscrit [sic] language, whatever be its antiquity, is of a wonderful structure; more perfect than the Greek, more copious than the Latin, and more exquisitely refined than either, yet bearing to both of them a stronger affinity, both in the roots of verbs and the forms of grammar, than could possibly have been produced by accident; so strong indeed, that no philologer could examine them all three, without believing them to have sprung from some common source, which, perhaps, no longer exists.

— Sir William Jones, Third Anniversary Discourse delivered 2 February 1786, ELIOHS

Thomas Young first used the term Indo-European in 1813, deriving it from the geographical extremes of the language family: from Western Europe to North India. A synonym is Indo-Germanic (Idg. or IdG.), specifying the family's southeasternmost and northwesternmost branches. This first appeared in French (indo-germanique) in 1810 in the work of Conrad Malte-Brun; in most languages this term is now dated or less common than Indo-European, although in German indogermanisch remains the standard scientific term. A number of other synonymous terms have also been used.

Franz Bopp was a pioneer in the field of comparative linguistic studies.

Franz Bopp wrote in 1816 On the conjugational system of the Sanskrit language compared with that of Greek, Latin, Persian and Germanic and between 1833 and 1852 he wrote Comparative Grammar. This marks the beginning of Indo-European studies as an academic discipline. The classical phase of Indo-European comparative linguistics leads from this work to August Schleicher's 1861 Compendium and up to Karl Brugmann's Grundriss, published in the 1880s. Brugmann's neogrammarian reevaluation of the field and Ferdinand de Saussure's development of the laryngeal theory may be considered the beginning of "modern" Indo-European studies. The generation of Indo-Europeanists active in the last third of the 20th century (such as Calvert Watkins, Jochem Schindler, and Helmut Rix) developed a better understanding of morphology and of ablaut in the wake of Kuryłowicz's 1956 Apophony in Indo-European, who in 1927 pointed out the existence of the Hittite consonant ḫ. Kuryłowicz's discovery supported Ferdinand de Saussure's 1879 proposal of the existence of coefficients sonantiques, elements de Saussure reconstructed to account for vowel length alternations in Indo-European languages. This led to the so-called laryngeal theory, a major step forward in Indo-European linguistics and a confirmation of de Saussure's theory.

Classification

See also: Indo-European migrations

The various subgroups of the Indo-European language family include ten major branches, listed below in alphabetical order:

In addition to the classical ten branches listed above, several extinct and little-known languages and language-groups have existed or are proposed to have existed:

  • Ancient Belgian: hypothetical language associated with the proposed Nordwestblock cultural area. Speculated to be connected to Italic or Venetic, and to have certain phonological features in common with Lusitanian.
  • Cimmerian: possibly Iranic, Thracian, or Celtic
  • Dacian: possibly very close to Thracian
  • Elymian: Poorly-attested language spoken by the Elymians, one of the three indigenous (i.e. pre-Greek and pre-Punic) tribes of Sicily. Indo-European affiliation widely accepted, possibly related to Italic or Anatolian.
  • Illyrian: possibly related to Albanian, Messapian, or both
  • Liburnian: evidence too scant and uncertain to determine anything with certainty
  • Ligurian: possibly close to or part of Celtic.
  • Lusitanian: possibly related to (or part of) Celtic, Ligurian, or Italic
  • Ancient Macedonian: proposed relationship to Greek.
  • Messapic: not conclusively deciphered, often considered to be related to Albanian as the available fragmentary linguistic evidence shows common characteristic innovations and a number of significant lexical correspondences between the two languages
  • Paionian: extinct language once spoken north of Macedon
  • Phrygian: language of the ancient Phrygians. Very likely, but not certainly, a sister group to Hellenic.
  • Sicel: an ancient language spoken by the Sicels (Greek Sikeloi, Latin Siculi), one of the three indigenous (i.e. pre-Greek and pre-Punic) tribes of Sicily. Proposed relationship to Latin or proto-Illyrian (Pre-Indo-European) at an earlier stage.
  • Sorothaptic: proposed, pre-Celtic, Iberian language
  • Thracian: possibly including Dacian
  • Venetic: shares several similarities with Latin and the Italic languages, but also has some affinities with other IE languages, especially Germanic and Celtic.
Indo-European family tree in order of first attestation
Indo-European language family tree based on "Ancestry-constrained phylogenetic analysis of Indo-European languages" by Chang et al.

Membership of languages in the Indo-European language family is determined by genealogical relationships, meaning that all members are presumed descendants of a common ancestor, Proto-Indo-European. Membership in the various branches, groups, and subgroups of Indo-European is also genealogical, but here the defining factors are shared innovations among various languages, suggesting a common ancestor that split off from other Indo-European groups. For example, what makes the Germanic languages a branch of Indo-European is that much of their structure and phonology can be stated in rules that apply to all of them. Many of their common features are presumed innovations that took place in Proto-Germanic, the source of all the Germanic languages.

In the 21st century, several attempts have been made to model the phylogeny of Indo-European languages using Bayesian methodologies similar to those applied to problems in biological phylogeny. Although there are differences in absolute timing between the various analyses, there is much commonality between them, including the result that the first known language groups to diverge were the Anatolian and Tocharian language families, in that order.

Tree versus wave model

See also: Language change

The "tree model" is considered an appropriate representation of the genealogical history of a language family if communities do not remain in contact after their languages have started to diverge. In this case, subgroups defined by shared innovations form a nested pattern. The tree model is not appropriate in cases where languages remain in contact as they diversify; in such cases subgroups may overlap, and the "wave model" is a more accurate representation. Most approaches to Indo-European subgrouping to date have assumed that the tree model is by-and-large valid for Indo-European; however, there is also a long tradition of wave-model approaches.

In addition to genealogical changes, many of the early changes in Indo-European languages can be attributed to language contact. It has been asserted, for example, that many of the more striking features shared by Italic languages (Latin, Oscan, Umbrian, etc.) might well be areal features. More certainly, very similar-looking alterations in the systems of long vowels in the West Germanic languages greatly postdate any possible notion of a proto-language innovation (and cannot readily be regarded as "areal", either, because English and continental West Germanic were not a linguistic area). In a similar vein, there are many similar innovations in Germanic and Balto-Slavic that are far more likely areal features than traceable to a common proto-language, such as the uniform development of a high vowel (*u in the case of Germanic, *i/u in the case of Baltic and Slavic) before the PIE syllabic resonants *ṛ, *ḷ, *ṃ, *ṇ, unique to these two groups among IE languages, which is in agreement with the wave model. The Balkan sprachbund even features areal convergence among members of very different branches.

An extension to the Ringe-Warnow model of language evolution suggests that early IE had featured limited contact between distinct lineages, with only the Germanic subfamily exhibiting a less treelike behaviour as it acquired some characteristics from neighbours early in its evolution. The internal diversification of especially West Germanic is cited to have been radically non-treelike.

Proposed subgroupings

Hypothetical Indo-European
phylogenetic clades
Balkan
Other

Specialists have postulated the existence of higher-order subgroups such as Italo-Celtic, Graeco-Armenian, Graeco-Aryan or Graeco-Armeno-Aryan, and Balto-Slavo-Germanic. However, unlike the ten traditional branches, these are all controversial to a greater or lesser degree.

The Italo-Celtic subgroup was at one point uncontroversial, considered by Antoine Meillet to be even better established than Balto-Slavic. The main lines of evidence included the genitive suffix ; the superlative suffix -m̥mo; the change of /p/ to /kʷ/ before another /kʷ/ in the same word (as in penkʷe > *kʷenkʷe > Latin quīnque, Old Irish cóic); and the subjunctive morpheme -ā-. This evidence was prominently challenged by Calvert Watkins, while Michael Weiss has argued for the subgroup.

Evidence for a relationship between Greek and Armenian includes the regular change of the second laryngeal to a at the beginnings of words, as well as terms for "woman" and "sheep". Greek and Indo-Iranian share innovations mainly in verbal morphology and patterns of nominal derivation. Relations have also been proposed between Phrygian and Greek, and between Thracian and Armenian. Some fundamental shared features, like the aorist (a verb form denoting action without reference to duration or completion) having the perfect active particle -s fixed to the stem, link this group closer to Anatolian languages and Tocharian. Shared features with Balto-Slavic languages, on the other hand (especially present and preterit formations), might be due to later contacts.

The Indo-Hittite hypothesis proposes that the Indo-European language family consists of two main branches: one represented by the Anatolian languages and another branch encompassing all other Indo-European languages. Features that separate Anatolian from all other branches of Indo-European (such as the gender or the verb system) have been interpreted alternately as archaic debris or as innovations due to prolonged isolation. Points proffered in favour of the Indo-Hittite hypothesis are the (non-universal) Indo-European agricultural terminology in Anatolia and the preservation of laryngeals. However, in general this hypothesis is considered to attribute too much weight to the Anatolian evidence. According to another view, the Anatolian subgroup left the Indo-European parent language comparatively late, approximately at the same time as Indo-Iranian and later than the Greek or Armenian divisions. A third view, especially prevalent in the so-called French school of Indo-European studies, holds that extant similarities in non-satem languages in general—including Anatolian—might be due to their peripheral location in the Indo-European language-area and to early separation, rather than indicating a special ancestral relationship. Hans J. Holm, based on lexical calculations, arrives at a picture roughly replicating the general scholarly opinion and refuting the Indo-Hittite hypothesis.

Satem and centum languages

Main article: Centum and satem languages
Some significant isoglosses in Indo-European daughter languages at around 500 BC.   Blue: centum languages   Red: satem languages   Orange: languages with augment   Green: languages with PIE *-tt- > -ss-   Tan: languages with PIE *-tt- > -st-   Pink: languages with instrumental, dative and ablative plural endings (and some others) in *-m- rather than *-bh-

The division of the Indo-European languages into satem and centum groups was put forward by Peter von Bradke in 1890, although Karl Brugmann did propose a similar type of division in 1886. In the satem languages, which include the Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian branches, as well as (in most respects) Albanian and Armenian, the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European palatovelars remained distinct and were fricativized, while the labiovelars merged with the 'plain velars'. In the centum languages, the palatovelars merged with the plain velars, while the labiovelars remained distinct. The results of these alternative developments are exemplified by the words for "hundred" in Avestan (satem) and Latin (centum)—the initial palatovelar developed into a fricative in the former, but became an ordinary velar in the latter.

Rather than being a genealogical separation, the centum–satem division is commonly seen as resulting from innovative changes that spread across PIE dialect-branches over a particular geographical area; the centum–satem isogloss intersects a number of other isoglosses that mark distinctions between features in the early IE branches. It may be that the centum branches in fact reflect the original state of affairs in PIE, and only the satem branches shared a set of innovations, which affected all but the peripheral areas of the PIE dialect continuum. Kortlandt proposes that the ancestors of Balts and Slavs took part in satemization before being drawn later into the western Indo-European sphere.

Proposed external relations

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From the very beginning of Indo-European studies, there have been attempts to link the Indo-European languages genealogically to other languages and language families. However, these theories remain highly controversial, and most specialists in Indo-European linguistics are skeptical or agnostic about such proposals.

Proposals linking the Indo-European languages with a single language family include:

Other proposed families include:

Nostratic and Eurasiatic, in turn, have been included in even wider groupings, such as Borean, a language family separately proposed by Harold C. Fleming and Sergei Starostin that encompasses almost all of the world's natural languages with the exception of those native to sub-Saharan Africa, New Guinea, Australia, and the Andaman Islands.

Evolution

Proto-Indo-European

Main article: Proto-Indo-European language
Scheme of Indo-European language dispersals from c. 4000 to 1000 BCE according to the widely held Kurgan hypothesis.
– Center: Steppe cultures
1 (black): Anatolian languages (archaic PIE)
2 (black): Afanasievo culture (early PIE)
3 (black) Yamnaya culture expansion (Pontic-Caspian steppe, Danube Valley) (late PIE)
4A (black): Western Corded Ware
4B-C (blue & dark blue): Bell Beaker; adopted by Indo-European speakers
5A-B (red): Eastern Corded ware
5C (red): Sintashta (proto-Indo-Iranian)
6 (magenta): Andronovo
7A (purple): Indo-Aryans (Mittani)
7B (purple): Indo-Aryans (India)
(dark yellow): proto-Balto-Slavic
8 (grey): Greek
9 (yellow):Iranians
– : Armenian, expanding from western steppe

The proposed Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European languages, spoken by the Proto-Indo-Europeans. From the 1960s, knowledge of Anatolian became certain enough to establish its relationship to PIE. Using the method of internal reconstruction, an earlier stage, called Pre-Proto-Indo-European, has been proposed.

PIE is an inflected language, in which the grammatical relationships between words were signaled through inflectional morphemes (usually endings). The roots of PIE are basic morphemes carrying a lexical meaning. By addition of suffixes, they form stems, and by addition of endings, these form grammatically inflected words (nouns or verbs). The reconstructed Indo-European verb system is complex and, like the noun, exhibits a system of ablaut.

Diversification

See also: Indo-European migrations

The diversification of the parent language into the attested branches of daughter languages is historically unattested. The timeline of the evolution of the various daughter languages, on the other hand, is mostly undisputed, quite regardless of the question of Indo-European origins.

Using a mathematical analysis borrowed from evolutionary biology, Donald Ringe and Tandy Warnow propose the following evolutionary tree of Indo-European branches:

  • Pre-Anatolian (before 3500 BC)
  • Pre-Tocharian
  • Pre-Italic and Pre-Celtic (before 2500 BC)
  • Pre-Armenian and Pre-Greek (after 2500 BC)
  • Proto-Indo-Iranian (2000 BC)
  • Pre-Germanic and Pre-Balto-Slavic; proto-Germanic c. 500 BC

David Anthony proposes the following sequence:

  • Pre-Anatolian (4200 BC)
  • Pre-Tocharian (3700 BC)
  • Pre-Germanic (3300 BC)
  • Pre-Italic and Pre-Celtic (3000 BC)
  • Pre-Armenian (2800 BC)
  • Pre-Balto-Slavic (2800 BC)
  • Pre-Greek (2500 BC)
  • Proto-Indo-Iranian (2200 BC); split between Iranian and Old Indic 1800 BC

From 1500 BC the following sequence may be given:

Important languages for reconstruction

In reconstructing the history of the Indo-European languages and the form of the Proto-Indo-European language, some languages have been of particular importance. These generally include the ancient Indo-European languages that are both well-attested and documented at an early date, although some languages from later periods are important if they are particularly linguistically conservative (most notably, Lithuanian). Early poetry is of special significance because of the rigid poetic meter normally employed, which makes it possible to reconstruct a number of features (e.g. vowel length) that were either unwritten or corrupted in the process of transmission down to the earliest extant written manuscripts.

Most noticeable of all:

  • Vedic Sanskrit (c. 1500–500 BC). This language is unique in that its source documents were all composed orally, and were passed down through oral tradition (shakha schools) for c. 2,000 years before ever being written down. The oldest documents are all in poetic form; oldest and most important of all is the Rigveda (c. 1500 BC).
  • Ancient Greek (c. 750–400 BC). Mycenaean Greek (c. 1450 BC) is the oldest recorded form, but its value is lessened by the limited material, restricted subject matter, and highly ambiguous writing system. More important is Ancient Greek, documented extensively beginning with the two Homeric poems (the Iliad and the Odyssey, c. 750 BC).
  • Hittite (c. 1700–1200 BC). This is the earliest-recorded of all Indo-European languages, and highly divergent from the others due to the early separation of the Anatolian languages from the remainder. It possesses some highly archaic features found only fragmentarily, if at all, in other languages. At the same time, however, it appears to have undergone many early phonological and grammatical changes which, combined with the ambiguities of its writing system, hinder its usefulness somewhat.

Other primary sources:

Other secondary sources, of lesser value due to poor attestation:

Other secondary sources, of lesser value due to extensive phonological changes and relatively limited attestation:

  • Old Irish (ADc. 700–850).
  • Tocharian (AD c. 500–800 ), underwent large phonetic shifts and mergers in the proto-language, and has an almost entirely reworked declension system.
  • Classical Armenian (AD c. 400–1000).
  • Albanian (c. 1450–current time).

Sound changes

Main article: Indo-European sound laws

As the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) language broke up, its sound system diverged as well, changing according to various sound laws evidenced in the daughter languages.

PIE is normally reconstructed with a complex system of 15 stop consonants, including an unusual three-way phonation (voicing) distinction between voiceless, voiced and "voiced aspirated" (i.e. breathy voiced) stops, and a three-way distinction among velar consonants (k-type sounds) between "palatal" ḱ ǵ ǵh, "plain velar" k g gh and labiovelar kʷ gʷ gʷh. (The correctness of the terms palatal and plain velar is disputed; see Proto-Indo-European phonology.) All daughter languages have reduced the number of distinctions among these sounds, often in divergent ways.

As an example, in English, one of the Germanic languages, the following are some of the major changes that happened:

  1. As in other centum languages, the "plain velar" and "palatal" stops merged, reducing the number of stops from 15 to 12.
  2. As in the other Germanic languages, the Germanic sound shift changed the realization of all stop consonants, with each consonant shifting to a different one:
    bʰ → b → p → f
    dʰ → d → t → θ
    gʰ → g → k → x (Later initial x →h)
    gʷʰ → gʷ → kʷ → xʷ (Later initial xʷ →hʷ)

    Each original consonant shifted one position to the right. For example, original dʰ became d, while original d became t and original t became θ (written th in English). This is the original source of the English sounds written f, th, h and wh. Examples, comparing English with Latin, where the sounds largely remain unshifted:

    For PIE p: piscis vs. fish; pēs, pēdis vs. foot; pluvium "rain" vs. flow; pater vs. father
    For PIE t: trēs vs. three; māter vs. mother
    For PIE d: decem vs. ten; pēdis vs. foot; quid vs. what
    For PIE k: centum vs. hund(red); capere "to take" vs. have
    For PIE : quid vs. what; quandō vs. when
  3. Various further changes affected consonants in the middle or end of a word:
    • The voiced stops resulting from the sound shift were softened to voiced fricatives (or perhaps the sound shift directly generated fricatives in these positions).
    • Verner's law also turned some of the voiceless fricatives resulting from the sound shift into voiced fricatives or stops. This is why the t in Latin centum ends up as d in hund(red) rather than the expected th.
    • Most remaining h sounds disappeared, while remaining f and th became voiced. For example, Latin decem ends up as ten with no h in the middle (but note taíhun "ten" in Gothic, an archaic Germanic language). Similarly, the words seven and have have a voiced v (compare Latin septem, capere), while father and mother have a voiced th, although not spelled differently (compare Latin pater, māter).

None of the daughter-language families (except possibly Anatolian, particularly Luvian) reflect the plain velar stops differently from the other two series, and there is even a certain amount of dispute whether this series existed at all in PIE. The major distinction between centum and satem languages corresponds to the outcome of the PIE plain velars:

The three-way PIE distinction between voiceless, voiced and voiced aspirated stops is considered extremely unusual from the perspective of linguistic typology—particularly in the existence of voiced aspirated stops without a corresponding series of voiceless aspirated stops. None of the various daughter-language families continue it unchanged, with numerous "solutions" to the apparently unstable PIE situation:

  • The Indo-Aryan languages preserve the three series unchanged but have evolved a fourth series of voiceless aspirated consonants.
  • The Iranian languages probably passed through the same stage, subsequently changing the aspirated stops into fricatives.
  • Greek converted the voiced aspirates into voiceless aspirates.
  • Italic probably passed through the same stage, but reflects the voiced aspirates as voiceless fricatives, especially f (or sometimes plain voiced stops in Latin).
  • Celtic, Balto-Slavic, Anatolian, and Albanian merge the voiced aspirated into plain voiced stops.
  • Germanic and Armenian change all three series in a chain shift (e.g. with bh b p becoming b p f (known as Grimm's law in Germanic)).

Among the other notable changes affecting consonants are:

The following table shows the basic outcomes of PIE consonants in some of the most important daughter languages for the purposes of reconstruction. For a fuller table, see Indo-European sound laws.

Proto-Indo-European consonants and their reflexes in selected Indo-European daughter languages
PIE Skr. O.C.S. Lith. Greek Latin Old Irish Gothic English Examples
PIE Eng. Skr. Gk. Lat. Lith. etc. Prs.
*p p; ph p Ø;
ch
f;
`-b-
f;
-v/f-
*pṓds ~ *ped- foot pád- poús (podós) pēs (pedis) pãdas Piáde
*t t; th t t;
-th-
þ ;
`-d- ;
t
th;
`-d-;
t
*tréyes three tráyas treĩs trēs trỹs thri (old Persian)
*ḱ ś s š k c c ;
-ch-
h;
`-g-
h;
-Ø-;
`-y-
*ḱm̥tóm hund(red) śatám he-katón centum šimtas sad
*k k; c ;
kh
k;
č ;
c
k *kreuh₂
"raw meat"
OE hrēaw
raw
kravíṣ- kréas cruor kraûjas xoreš
*kʷ p;
t;
k
qu ;
c
ƕ ;
`-gw/w-
wh;
`-w-
*kʷid, kʷod what kím quid, quod kas, kad ce, ci
*kʷekʷlom wheel cakrá- kúklos kãklas carx
*b b; bh b b ;
--
p
*d d; dh d d ;
--
t *déḱm̥(t) ten,
Goth. taíhun
dáśa déka decem dẽšimt dah
j ;
h
z ž g g ;
--
k c / k;
ch
*ǵénu, *ǵnéu- OE cnēo
knee
jā́nu gónu genu zánu
*g g;
j ;
gh;
h
g;
ž ;
dz
g *yugóm yoke yugám zugón iugum jùngas yugh
*gʷ b;
d;
g
u ;
gu
b ;
--
q qu *gʷīw- quick
"alive"
jīvá- bíos,
bíotos
vīvus gývas ze-
*bʰ bh;
b
b ph;
p
f-;
b
b ;
--;
-f
b;
-v/f-
*bʰéroh₂ bear "carry" bhar- phérō ferō OCS berǫ bar-
*dʰ dh;
d
d th;
t
f-;
d;
b
d ;
--
d ;
--;
-þ
d *dʰwer-, dʰur- door dvā́raḥ thurā́ forēs dùrys dar
*ǵʰ h ;
j
z ž kh;
k
h;
h/g
g ;
--
g;
-g- ;
-g
g;
-y/w-
*ǵʰans- goose,
OHG gans
haṁsáḥ khḗn (h)ānser žąsìs gház
*gʰ gh;
h ;
g;
j
g;
ž ;
dz
g
*gʷʰ ph;
th;
kh;
p;
t;
k
f-;
g /
-u- ;
gu
g;
b-;
-w-;
gw
g;
b-;
-w-
*sneigʷʰ- snow sneha- nípha nivis sniẽgas barf
*gʷʰerm- ??warm gharmáḥ thermós formus Latv. gar̂me garm
*s s h-;
-s;
s;
-Ø-;
s;
-r-
s ;
--
s;
`-z-
s;
`-r-
*septḿ̥ seven saptá heptá septem septynì haft
x š *h₂eusōs
"dawn"
east uṣā́ḥ āṓs aurōra aušra báxtar
*m m m ;
--
m *mūs mouse mū́ṣ- mũs mūs OCS myšĭ muš
*-m -m -˛ -n -m -n -Ø *ḱm̥tóm hund(red) śatám (he)katón centum OPrus simtan sad
*n n n;
-˛
n *nokʷt- night nákt- núkt- noct- naktis náštá
*l r (dial. l) l *leuk- light ruc- leukós lūx laũkas ruz
*r r *h₁reudʰ- red rudhirá- eruthrós ruber raũdas sorx
*i̯ y j z /
h;
-Ø-
i ;
-Ø-
Ø j y *yugóm yoke yugám zugón iugum jùngas yugh
*u̯ v v v w > h / Ø u f;
-Ø-
w *h₂weh₁n̥to- wind vā́taḥ áenta ventus vėtra bád
PIE Skr. O.C.S. Lith. Greek Latin Old Irish Gothic English
Notes:
  • C- At the beginning of a word.
  • -C- Between vowels.
  • -C At the end of a word.
  • `-C- Following an unstressed vowel (Verner's law).
  • -C- Between vowels, or between a vowel and r, l (on either side).
  • C Before a (PIE) stop (p, t, k).
  • C After a (PIE) obstruent (p, t, k, etc.; s).
  • C Before or after an obstruent (p, t, k, etc.; s).
  • C Before an original laryngeal.
  • C Before a (PIE) front vowel (i, e).
  • C Before secondary (post-PIE) front-vowels.
  • C Before e.
  • C Before or after a (PIE) u (boukólos rule).
  • C Before or after a (PIE) o, u (boukólos rule).
  • C After n.
  • C Before a sonorant (r, l, m, n).
  • C Before or after a sonorant (r, l, m, n).
  • C Before r, l or after r, u.
  • C After r, u, k, i (Ruki sound law).
  • C Before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (Grassmann's law, also known as dissimilation of aspirates).
  • C Before a (PIE) front vowel (i, e) as well as before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (Grassmann's law, also known as dissimilation of aspirates).
  • C Before or after a (PIE) u as well as before an aspirated consonant in the next syllable (Grassmann's law, also known as dissimilation of aspirates).

Comparison of conjugations

The following table presents a comparison of conjugations of the thematic present indicative of the verbal root *bʰer- of the English verb to bear and its reflexes in various early attested IE languages and their modern descendants or relatives, showing that all languages had in the early stage an inflectional verb system.

Proto-Indo-European
(*bʰer- 'to carry, to bear')
I (1st sg.) *bʰéroh₂
You (2nd sg.) *bʰéresi
He/She/It (3rd sg.) *bʰéreti
We two (1st dual) *bʰérowos
You two (2nd dual) *bʰéreth₁es
They two (3rd dual) *bʰéretes
We (1st pl.) *bʰéromos
You (2nd pl.) *bʰérete
They (3rd pl.) *bʰéronti
Major subgroup Hellenic Indo-Iranian Italic Celtic Armenian Germanic Balto-Slavic Albanian
Indo-Aryan Iranian Baltic Slavic
Ancient representative Ancient Greek Vedic Sanskrit Avestan Latin Old Irish Classical Armenian Gothic Old Prussian Old Church Sl. Old Albanian
I (1st sg.) phérō bʰárāmi barāmi ferō biru; berim berem baíra /bɛra/ *bera berǫ *berja
You (2nd sg.) phéreis bʰárasi barahi fers biri; berir beres baíris *bera bereši *berje
He/She/It (3rd sg.) phérei bʰárati baraiti fert berid berē baíriþ *bera beretъ *berjet
We two (1st dual) bʰárāvas barāvahi baíros berevě
You two (2nd dual) phéreton bʰárathas baírats bereta
They two (3rd dual) phéreton bʰáratas baratō berete
We (1st pl.) phéromen bʰárāmas barāmahi ferimus bermai beremkʿ baíram *beramai beremъ *berjame
You (2nd pl.) phérete bʰáratha baraθa fertis beirthe berēkʿ baíriþ *beratei berete *berjeju
They (3rd pl.) phérousi bʰáranti barəṇti ferunt berait beren baírand *bera berǫtъ *berjanti
Modern representative Modern Greek Hindustani Persian Portuguese Irish Armenian (Eastern; Western) German Lithuanian Slovene Albanian
I (1st sg.) férno (ma͠i) bʰarūm̥ (man) {mi}baram {con}firo beirim berum em; g'perem (ich) {ge}bäre beriu bérem (unë) bie
You (2nd sg.) férnis (tū) bʰarē (tu) {mi}bari {con}feres beirir berum es; g'peres (du) {ge}bierst beri béreš (ti) bie
He/She/It (3rd sg.) férni (ye/vo) bʰarē (ān) {mi}barad {con}fere beiridh berum ē; g'perē (er/sie/es) {ge}biert beria bére (ai/ajo) bie
We two (1st dual) beriava béreva
You two (2nd dual) beriata béreta
They two (3rd dual) beria béreta
We (1st pl.) férnume (ham) bʰarēm̥ (mā) {mi}barim {con}ferimos beirimid; beiream berum enkʿ; g'perenkʿ (wir) {ge}bären beriame béremo (ne) biem
You (2nd pl.) férnete (tum) bʰaro (šomā) {mi}barid {con}feris beirthidh berum ekʿ; g'perekʿ (ihr) {ge}bärt beriate bérete (ju) bini
They (3rd pl.) férnun (ye/vo) bʰarēm̥ (ānān) {mi}barand {con}ferem beirid berum en; g'peren (sie) {ge}bären beria bérejo; berọ́ (ata/ato) bien

While similarities are still visible between the modern descendants and relatives of these ancient languages, the differences have increased over time. Some IE languages have moved from synthetic verb systems to largely periphrastic systems. In addition, the pronouns of periphrastic forms are in parentheses when they appear. Some of these verbs have undergone a change in meaning as well.

  • In Modern Irish beir usually only carries the meaning to bear in the sense of bearing a child; its common meanings are to catch, grab. Apart from the first person, the forms given in the table above are dialectical or obsolete. The second and third person forms are typically instead conjugated periphrastically by adding a pronoun after the verb: beireann tú, beireann sé/sí, beireann sibh, beireann siad.
  • The Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu) verb bʰarnā, the continuation of the Sanskrit verb, can have a variety of meanings, but the most common is "to fill". The forms given in the table, although etymologically derived from the present indicative, now have the meaning of future subjunctive. The loss of the present indicative in Hindustani is roughly compensated by the periphrastic habitual indicative construction, using the habitual participle (etymologically from the Sanskrit present participle bʰarant-) and an auxiliary: ma͠i bʰartā hū̃, tū bʰartā hai, vah bʰartā hai, ham bʰarte ha͠i, tum bʰarte ho, ve bʰarte ha͠i (masculine forms).
  • German is not directly descended from Gothic, but the Gothic forms are a close approximation of what the early West Germanic forms of c. 400 AD would have looked like. The descendant of Proto-Germanic *beraną (English bear) survives in German only in the compound gebären, meaning "bear (a child)".
  • The Latin verb ferre is irregular, and not a good representative of a normal thematic verb. In most Romance languages such as Portuguese, other verbs now mean "to carry" (e.g. Pt. portar < Lat. portare) and ferre was borrowed and nativized only in compounds such as sofrer "to suffer" (from Latin sub- and ferre) and conferir "to confer" (from Latin "con-" and "ferre").
  • In Modern Greek, phero φέρω (modern transliteration fero) "to bear" is still used but only in specific contexts and is most common in such compounds as αναφέρω, διαφέρω, εισφέρω, εκφέρω, καταφέρω, προφέρω, προαναφέρω, προσφέρω etc. The form that is (very) common today is pherno φέρνω (modern transliteration ferno) meaning "to bring". Additionally, the perfective form of pherno (used for the subjunctive voice and also for the future tense) is also phero.
  • The dual forms are archaic in standard Lithuanian, and are only presently used in some dialects (e.g. Samogitian).
  • Among modern Slavic languages, only Slovene continues to have a dual number in the standard variety.

Comparison of cognates

Main article: Indo-European vocabulary See also: Proto-Indo-European numerals

Present distribution

  Countries where Indo-European language family is majority native   Countries where Indo-European language family is official but not majority native   Countries where Indo-European language family is not official
Distribution of Indo-European languages in the Americas
Romance:   Spanish   Portuguese   French Germanic:   English   Dutch

Today, Indo-European languages are spoken by billions of native speakers across all inhabited continents, the largest number by far for any recognised language family. Of the 20 languages with the largest numbers of speakers according to Ethnologue, 10 are Indo-European: English, Hindustani, Spanish, Bengali, French, Russian, Portuguese, German, Persian and Punjabi, each with 100 million speakers or more. Additionally, hundreds of millions of persons worldwide study Indo-European languages as secondary or tertiary languages, including in cultures which have completely different language families and historical backgrounds—there are around 600 million learners of English alone.

The success of the language family, including the large number of speakers and the vast portions of the Earth that they inhabit, is due to several factors. The ancient Indo-European migrations and widespread dissemination of Indo-European culture throughout Eurasia, including that of the Proto-Indo-Europeans themselves, and that of their daughter cultures including the Indo-Aryans, Iranian peoples, Celts, Greeks, Romans, Germanic peoples, and Slavs, led to these peoples' branches of the language family already taking a dominant foothold in virtually all of Eurasia except for swathes of the Near East, North and East Asia, replacing many (but not all) of the previously-spoken pre-Indo-European languages of this extensive area. However Semitic languages remain dominant in much of the Middle East and North Africa, and Caucasian languages in much of the Caucasus region. Similarly in Europe and the Urals the Uralic languages (such as Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian etc.) remain, as does Basque, a pre-Indo-European isolate.

Despite being unaware of their common linguistic origin, diverse groups of Indo-European speakers continued to culturally dominate and often replace the indigenous languages of the western two-thirds of Eurasia. By the beginning of the Common Era, Indo-European peoples controlled almost the entirety of this area: the Celts western and central Europe, the Romans southern Europe, the Germanic peoples northern Europe, the Slavs eastern Europe, the Iranian peoples most of western and central Asia and parts of eastern Europe, and the Indo-Aryan peoples in the Indian subcontinent, with the Tocharians inhabiting the Indo-European frontier in western China. By the medieval period, only the Semitic, Dravidian, Caucasian, and Uralic languages, and the language isolate Basque remained of the (relatively) indigenous languages of Europe and the western half of Asia.

Despite medieval invasions by Eurasian nomads, a group to which the Proto-Indo-Europeans had once belonged, Indo-European expansion reached another peak in the early modern period with the dramatic increase in the population of the Indian subcontinent and European expansionism throughout the globe during the Age of Discovery, as well as the continued replacement and assimilation of surrounding non-Indo-European languages and peoples due to increased state centralization and nationalism. These trends compounded throughout the modern period due to the general global population growth and the results of European colonization of the Western Hemisphere and Oceania, leading to an explosion in the number of Indo-European speakers as well as the territories inhabited by them.

Due to colonization and the modern dominance of Indo-European languages in the fields of politics, global science, technology, education, finance, and sports, even many modern countries whose populations largely speak non-Indo-European languages have Indo-European languages as official languages, and the majority of the global population speaks at least one Indo-European language. The overwhelming majority of languages used on the Internet are Indo-European, with English continuing to lead the group; English in general has in many respects become the lingua franca of global communication.

See also

Notes

  1. The sentence goes on to say, equally correctly as it turned out: "...here is a similar reason, though not quite so forcible, for supposing that both the Gothic and the Celtic, though blended with a very different idiom, had the same origin with the Sanscrit; and the old Persian might be added to the same family."

References

Citations

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  2. Bryce, Trevor (2005). Kingdom of the Hittites (new ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-19-928132-9.
  3. Mallory, J. P. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford University Press. p. 442. ISBN 978-0-19-928791-8.
  4. ^ Auroux 2000, p. 1156.
  5. Beekes 2011, p. 12.
  6. M.V. Lomonosov (drafts for Russian Grammar, published 1755). In: Complete Edition, Moscow, 1952, vol. 7, pp. 652–59 Archived 1 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine: Представимъ долготу времени, которою сіи языки раздѣлились. ... Польской и россійской языкъ коль давно раздѣлились! Подумай же, когда курляндской! Подумай же, когда латинской, греч., нѣм., росс. О глубокая древность! Kurlandic! Think when Latin, Greek, German, and Russian! Oh, great antiquity!]
  7. Poser, William J.; Campbell, Lyle (1992). "Indo-European Practice and Historical Methodology". Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session and Parasession on The Place of Morphology in a Grammar. Vol. 18. Berkeley Linguistics Society. pp. 227–8. doi:10.3765/bls.v18i1.1574. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  8. Roger Blench (2004). "Archaeology and Language: methods and issues" (PDF). In John Bintliff (ed.). A Companion To Archaeology. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 52–74. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2006. Retrieved 29 May 2010. Blench erroneously included Egyptian, Japanese, and Chinese in the Indo-European languages, while omitting Hindi.
  9. Jones, William (2 February 1786). "The Third Anniversary Discourse". Electronic Library of Historiography. Universita degli Studi Firenze, taken from: Shore (Lord Teignmouth), John (1807). The Works of Sir William Jones. With a Life of the Author. Vol. III. John Stockdale and John Walker. pp. 24–46. OCLC 899731310.
  10. Robinson, Andrew (2007). The Last Man Who Knew Everything: Thomas Young, the Anonymous Genius who Proved Newton Wrong and Deciphered the Rosetta Stone, among Other Surprising Feats. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-13-134304-7.
  11. In London Quarterly Review X/2 1813.; cf. Szemerényi, Jones & Jones 1999, p. 12 footnote 6.
  12. Franz Bopp (2010) . Über das Conjugationssystem der Sanskritsprache : in Vergleichung mit jenem der griechischen, lateinischen, persischen und germanischen Sprache. Documenta Semiotica : Serie 1, Linguistik (2 ed.). Hildesheim: Olms.
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  14. Elsie, Robert (2005). "Theodor of Shkodra (1210) and Other Early Texts". Albanian Literature: A Short History. New York/Westport/London: I.B. Tauris. p. 5.
  15. In his latest book, Eric Hamp supports the thesis that the Illyrian language belongs to the Northwestern group, that the Albanian language is descended from Illyrian, and that Albanian is related to Messapic which is an earlier Illyrian dialect (Hamp 2007).
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  17. Curtis, Matthew Cowan (30 November 2011). Slavic–Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence. ProQuest LLC. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-267-58033-7. Retrieved 31 March 2017. So while linguists may debate about the ties between Albanian and older languages of the Balkans, and while most Albanians may take the genealogical connection to Illyrian as incontrovertible, the fact remains that there is simply insufficient evidence to connect Illyrian, Thracian, or Dacian with any language, including Albanian
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Sources

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External links

Library resources about
Indo-European languages

Databases

Lexica

Indo-European languages (list)
Anatolian
Luwic
Balto-Slavic
Baltic
Slavic
Celtic
Germanic
Indo-Iranian
Italic
Tocharian
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Proto-languages
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See also
  • Families with question marks (?) are disputed or controversial.
  • Families in italics have no living members.
  • Families with more than 30 languages are in bold.
Language families of Eurasia
Europe
West Asia
Caucasus
South Asia
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Indian Ocean rim
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"Paleosiberian"
Other North Asia
Proposed groupings
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  • Families in italics have no living members.
  • Families with more than 30 languages are in bold.
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