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The '''Armenian language''' ({{lang|hy|]}} in ] or {{lang|hy|]}} in ], {{IPA-hy|hɑjɛˈɾɛn}}—''{{transl|hy|ISO|hayeren}}'') is an ] spoken by the ]. It is the official language of the ] as well as in the region of ]. The language is also widely spoken by Armenian communities in the ]. It has its own script, the ], and is of interest to linguists for its distinctive phonological developments within Indo-European.<ref>''Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction'', Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009 .</ref> The '''Armenian language''' ({{lang|hy|]}} in ] or {{lang|hy|]}} in ], {{IPA-hy|hɑjɛˈɾɛn}}—''{{transl|hy|ISO|hayeren}}'') is an ] spoken by the ]. It is the official language of the ] as well as in the region of ]. The language is also widely spoken by Armenian communities in the ]. It has its own script, the ], and is of interest to linguists for its distinctive phonological developments within Indo-European.<ref>''Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction'', Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009 .</ref>


Linguists classify Armenian as an independent branch of the ] language family.<ref></ref> Armenian shares a number of major innovations with Greek, and some linguists group these two languages together with ] and the ] family into a higher-level subgroup of Indo-European which is defined by such ] as the ]. More recently, others have proposed a Balkan grouping including Greek, Armenian, Phrygian and ].<ref>''Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction'', Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, p383.</ref> Linguists classify Armenian as an independent branch of the ] language family.<ref></ref> Armenian shares a number of major innovations with the ] family into a higher-level subgroup of Indo-European which is defined by such ] as the ].<ref>''Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction'', Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, p383.</ref>


Armenian has a long literary history, with a fifth-century Bible translation as its oldest surviving text. Its vocabulary has been heavily influenced by ], particularly ], and to a lesser extent by Greek, ], ], ], ], ], and other languages throughout its history. There are two standardized modern literary forms, ] and ], with which most contemporary dialects are ]. The divergent and almost extinct ] is a ]-influenced dialect with an Armenian grammar and a largely Romani-derived vocabulary, including Romani numbers. Armenian has a long literary history, with a fifth-century Bible translation as its oldest surviving text. Its vocabulary has been heavily linked with ], particularly ], and to a lesser extent by Greek, and other languages throughout its history. There are two standardized modern literary forms, ] and ], with which most contemporary dialects are ]. The divergent and almost extinct ] is a ]-influenced dialect with an Armenian grammar and a largely Romani-derived vocabulary, including Romani numbers.


==Classification and origins== ==Classification and origins==
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Revision as of 10:49, 24 April 2011

Not to be confused with Aromanian language.

Template:Contains Armenian text

Armenian
Հայերէն Hayeren
Pronunciation[hɑjɛˈɾɛn]
Native to Armenia
 Nagorno-Karabakh (not recognized internationally)
 Russia
 United States
 France
 Georgia
 Iran
 Israel
 Ukraine
 Argentina
 Lebanon
 Syria
 Turkey
 Canada
 Australia
 Azerbaijan
Native speakers6.7 million
Language familyIndo-European
  • Armenian
Writing systemArmenian alphabet
Official status
Official language in Armenia
 Nagorno-Karabakh
(not recognized internationally)
Minority language:
 Cyprus
 Poland
 Romania
Regulated byNational Academy of Sciences of Armenia
Language codes
ISO 639-1hy
ISO 639-2arm (B)
hye (T)
ISO 639-3Variously:
hye – Modern Armenian
xcl – Classical Armenian
axm – Middle Armenian
Linguasphere57-AAA-a

The Armenian language (հայերէն in TAO or հայերեն in RAO, Armenian pronunciation: [hɑjɛˈɾɛn]hayeren) is an Indo-European language spoken by the Armenian people. It is the official language of the Republic of Armenia as well as in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The language is also widely spoken by Armenian communities in the Armenian diaspora. It has its own script, the Armenian alphabet, and is of interest to linguists for its distinctive phonological developments within Indo-European.

Linguists classify Armenian as an independent branch of the Indo-European language family. Armenian shares a number of major innovations with the Indo-Iranian family into a higher-level subgroup of Indo-European which is defined by such shared innovations as the augment.

Armenian has a long literary history, with a fifth-century Bible translation as its oldest surviving text. Its vocabulary has been heavily linked with Western Middle Iranian languages, particularly Parthian, and to a lesser extent by Greek, and other languages throughout its history. There are two standardized modern literary forms, Eastern Armenian and Western Armenian, with which most contemporary dialects are mutually intelligible. The divergent and almost extinct Lomavren language is a Romani-influenced dialect with an Armenian grammar and a largely Romani-derived vocabulary, including Romani numbers.

Classification and origins

Main article: Proto-Armenian language See also: Armenian hypothesis
History of the Armenian language
Armenian alphabet
Romanization of Armenian
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While the Armenians were known to history much earlier (for example, they were mentioned in the 6th century BC Behistun Inscription and Xenophon's 4th century BC history, The Anabasis), the oldest surviving Armenian language text is the 5th century AD Bible translation of Mesrob Mashtots.

Early contacts

The large percentage of loans from Iranian languages initially led linguists to erroneously classify Armenian as an Iranian language. The distinctness of Armenian was only recognized when Hübschmann (1875) used the comparative method to distinguish two layers of Iranian loans from the true Armenian vocabulary.

W. M. Austin in 1942 concluded that there was an early contact between Armenian and Anatolian languages, based on what he considered common archaisms, such as the lack of a feminine and the absence of inherited long vowels. But, unlike shared innovations (or synapomorphies) the common retention of archaisms (or symplesiomorphy) is not necessarily considered evidence of a period of common isolated development. (For example, the fact that birds and turtles have scales is not evidence of any special closeness, some mammals retain scales too, and scales date back to our common ancestors, the fish.)

In his paper, "Hurro-Urartian Borrowings in Old Armenian", Soviet linguist Igor Mikhailovich Diakonov notes the presence in Old Armenian of what he calls a Caucasian substratum, identified by earlier scholars, consisting of loans from the Kartvelian and Northeast Caucasian languages such as Udi. Noting that the Hurro-Urartian peoples inhabited the Armenian homeland in the second millennium BC, Diakonov identifies in Armenian a Hurro-Urartian substratum of social, cultural, and zoological and biological terms such as ałaxin ('slavegirl') and xnjor ('apple(tree)'). Some of the terms he gives admittedly have an Akkadian or Sumerian provenance, but he suggests they were borrowed through Hurrian or Urartu. Given that these borrowings do not undergo sound changes characteristic of the development of Armenian from Proto-Indo-European, he dates their borrowing to a time before the written record but after the Proto-Armenian language stage.

Graeco-Armenian hypothesis

Main article: Graeco-Armenian hypothesis

The hypothesis that Greek is Armenian's closest living relative originates with Pedersen (1924), who noted that the number of Greek-Armenian lexical cognates is greater than that of agreements between Armenian and any other Indo-European language. Meillet (1925, 1927) further investigated morphological and phonological agreement, postulating that the parent languages of Greek and Armenian were dialects in immediate geographical proximity in the parent language. Meillet's hypothesis became popular in the wake of his Esquisse (1936). Solta (1960) does not go as far as postulating a Proto-Graeco-Armenian stage, but he concludes that considering both the lexicon and morphology, Greek is clearly the dialect most closely related to Armenian. Hamp (1976:91) supports the Graeco-Armenian thesis, anticipating even a time "when we should speak of Helleno-Armenian" (meaning the postulate of a Graeco-Armenian proto-language). Armenian shares the augment, a negator derived from the set phrase *ne hoiu kwid ("not ever at all"), the representation of word-initial laryngeals by prothetic vowels, and other phonological and morphological peculiarities with Greek. The closeness of the relationship between Armenian and Greek sheds light on the paraphyletic nature of the Centum-Satem isogloss. Nevertheless, linguists including Fortson (2004) comment "by the time we reach our earliest Armenian records in the 5th century A.D., the evidence of any such early kinship has been reduced to a few tantalizing pieces."

Evolution

Early in the fifth century, Classical Armenian, or Grabar, was one of the great languages of the Near East and Asia Minor. Although an autonomous branch within the Indo-European family of languages, it had some affinities to Middle Iranian, Greek and the Balto-Slavic languages, but belonged to none of them. It was characterized by a system of inflection unlike the other languages, as well as a flexible and liberal use of combining root words to create derivative and compound words by the application of certain agglutinative affixes.

The classical language imported numerous words from Middle Iranian languages, primarily Parthian, and contains smaller inventories of borrowings from Greek, Syriac, Latin, and autochthonous languages such as Urartian. Middle Armenian (11th–15th centuries AD) incorporated further loans from Arabic, Turkish, Persian, and Latin, and the modern dialects took in hundreds of additional words from Modern Turkish and Persian. Therefore, determining the historical evolution of Armenian is particularly difficult because Armenian borrowed many words from Parthian and Persian (both Iranian languages) as well as from Greek.

In the period that followed the invention of the alphabet and up to the threshold of the modern era, Grabar (Classical Armenian) lived on. An effort to modernize the language in Greater Armenia and the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia (11-14th centuries) resulted in the addition of two more characters to the alphabet, bringing the total number to 38.

The Book of Lamentations by Gregory of Narek (951-1003), that could be considered a masterpiece of world literature, is perhaps a good example of the development of a literature and writing style that came to be known as Middle Armenian or Vernacular. In addition to elevating the literary style of the Armenian language, Gregory of Nareg paved the way for his successors to include secular themes in their writings. The thematic shift from mainly religious texts to writings with secular outlooks further enhanced and enriched the vocabulary. “A Word of Wisdom,” a poem by Hovhannes Sargavak devoted to a starling, legitimizes poetry devoted to nature, love or female beauty. Gradually, the interests of the “vulgar population” were also reflected in other literary works. Konsdantin Yerzinkatsi and several others even take the unusual step of criticizing the ecclesiastic establishment and addressing the social issues of the Armenian homeland. Not surprisingly, these changes altered the nature of the literary style and syntax but they did not constitute radical changes to the fundamentals of the grammar or the morphology of the language.

The Treaty of Turkmenchay of 1828 once again divided the traditional Armenian homeland. This time, two thirds of historical Armenia fell under Ottoman control, while the remaining territories were divided between the Russian and Persian empires. The antagonistic relationship between the Russian and Ottoman Empires led to creation of two separate and different environments under which Armenians lived and suffered. Halfway through the 19th century, two important concentrations of Armenian communities were constituted.

Because of persecutions or the search for better economic opportunities, many Armenians living under Ottoman rule gradually moved to Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, while Tiflis (Tbilisi), in Georgia, became the center of Armenians living under Russian rule. These two cosmopolitan cities very soon became the primary poles of Armenian intellectual and cultural life.

The introduction of new literary forms and styles, as well as many new ideas sweeping Europe reached Armenians living in both regions. This created an ever-growing need to elevate the vulgar language, Ašxarhabar, to the dignity of a modern literary language, in contrast to the now-anachronistic Grabar. Numerous dialects developed in the traditional Armenian regions, which, different as they were, had certain morphological and phonetic features in common. On the basis of these features two major variants emerged:

  • Western Variant: The influx of immigrants from different parts of the traditional Armenian homeland to Constantinople crystallized the common elements of the regional dialects, paving the way to a style of writing that required a shorter and more flexible learning curve than Grabar.
  • Eastern Variant: The dialect of the Ararat plateau provided the primary elements of Eastern Armenian, centered in Tiflis (Tbilisi, Georgia). Similar to the Western Armenian variant, the Modern Eastern was in many ways more practical and accessible to the masses than Grabar.

Both centers vigorously pursued the promotion of Ašxarhabar. The proliferation of newspapers in both versions (Eastern & Western) and the development of a network of schools where modern Armenian was taught, dramatically increased the rate of literacy (in spite of the obstacles by the colonial administrators), even in remote rural areas. The emergence of literary works entirely written in the modern versions increasingly legitimized the language’s existence. By the turn of the 20th century both varieties of the one modern Armenian language prevailed over Grabar and opened the path to a new and simplified grammatical structure of the language in the two different cultural spheres. Apart from minor morphological, phonetic and grammatical differences, the largely common vocabulary and identical rules of grammatical fundamentals allows users of one variant to understand the other easily.

After the First World War, the existence of the two modern versions of the same language was sanctioned even more clearly. The Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic (1920–1990) used Eastern Armenian as its official language, while the Diaspora created after the Genocide of 1915 carried with it the only thing survivors still possessed: its mother tongue, Western Armenian.

Modern changes

The two modern literary dialects, Western (originally associated with writers in the Ottoman Empire) and Eastern (originally associated with writers in the Russian Empire), removed almost all of their Turkish lexical influences in the 20th century, primarily following the Armenian Genocide.

Phonology

Proto-Indo-European voiceless stops are aspirated in Proto-Armenian, one of the circumstances that is often linked to the Glottalic theory, part of which postulated that the voiceless stops of Proto-Indo-European were aspirated.

Stress

In Armenian the stress always falls on the last syllable, unless the last syllable contains , in which case it falls on the penultimate one. For instance, , , , but and .

Vowels

Part of a series on
Armenians
Armenian culture
By country or region

Armenian diaspora
Subgroups
Religion
Languages and dialects
Armenian: Eastern (Zok) • Western (Homshetsi)
Sign languages: Armenian Sign • Caucasian Sign
Persian: Armeno-Tat
Cuman: Armeno-Kipchak
Armenian–Lom: Lomavren
Persecution

Modern Armenian has six monophthong vowel sounds.

Front Central Back
Unrounded Rounded Unrounded Rounded
Close i
ի
i
    u
ու
u
Mid ɛ
ե, է
e, ē
ə
ը
ë
  o
ո, օ
o, ò
Open       ɑ
ա
a
 

Consonants

The following table lists the Eastern Armenian consonantal system. The occlusives and affricates have a special aspirated series (transcribed with a Greek spiritus asper after the letter): p῾, t῾, c῾, č῾, k῾. Each phoneme in the table is represented by three symbols. The topmost indicates the phoneme's pronunciation in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA); below that appears the corresponding letter of the Armenian alphabet; and the bottom symbol is its Latin-alphabet transliteration (according to ISO 9985).

  bilabial labio-
dental
alveolar post-
alveolar
palatal velar /
uvular
glottal
plosive p  b
պ  բ
p  b
  t  d
տ  դ
t  d
    k  ɡ
կ  գ
k  g
 
aspirated plosive
փ
p’
 
թ
t’
   
ք
k’
 
nasal m
մ
m
  n
ն
n
       
fricative   f  v
ֆ  վ
f  v
s  z
ս  զ
s  z
ʃ  ʒ
շ  ժ
š  ž
  χ  ʁ
խ  ղ
x  ġ
h
հ
h
affricate     t͡s  d͡z
ծ  ձ
ç  j
t͡ʃ  d͡ʒ
ճ  ջ
č̣  ǰ
     
aspirated affricate     t͡sʰ
ց
c’
t͡ʃʰ
չ
č
     
flap     ɾ
ր
r
  j
-յ-
y
   
trill     r
ռ
       
lateral approximant     l
լ
l
       

Morphology

Armenian manuscript, circa 5th-6th century.

Armenian corresponds with other Indo-European languages in its structure, but it shares distinctive sounds and features of its grammar with neighboring languages of the Caucasus region. Armenian is rich in combinations of consonants. Both classical Armenian and the modern spoken and literary dialects have a complicated system of declining nouns, with six or seven noun cases but no gender. In modern Armenian the use of auxiliary verbs to show tense (comparable to will in "he will go") has generally supplemented the inflected verbs of Classical Armenian. Negative verbs are conjugated differently from positive ones (as in English "he goes" and "he does not go"). Grammatically, early forms of Armenian had much in common with classical Greek and Latin, but the modern language, like modern Greek, has undergone many transformations. With time the Armenian language made a transition from a synthetic language (Old Armenian or Grabar) to a typical analytic language (Modern Armenian) with Middle Armenian as a midpoint in this transition.

Noun

Classical Armenian has no grammatical gender, not even in the pronoun. The nominal inflection, however, preserves several types of inherited stem classes. The noun may take seven cases, nominative, accusative, locative, genitive, dative, ablative, instrumental.

Verb

Main article: Armenian verbs

Verbs in Armenian have an expansive system of conjugation with two main verb types (three in Western Armenian) changing form based on tense, mood and aspect.

Dialects

The major division is between the Eastern and Western dialects. The most distinctive feature of Western Armenian is that it has undergone several phonetic mergers; these may be due to proximity to Arabic and Turkish-speaking communities.

For example, Eastern Armenian speakers pronounce (թ) as an aspirated "t" as in "tiger", (դ) like the "d" in "develop", and (տ) as an unaspirated voiceless stop, sounding somewhere between the two as in "stop." Western Armenian has simplified the stop system into a simple division between voiced stops and voiceless aspirate ones; the first series corresponds to the unaspirated voiceless series of Eastern Armenian, and the second corresponds to the Eastern voiced and aspirated voiceless series. Thus, the Western dialect pronounces both (թ) and (դ) as an aspirated "t" as in "tiger," and the (տ) letter is pronounced like the letter "d" as in "develop."

There is no precise linguistic border between one dialect and another because there is nearly always a dialect transition zone of some size between pairs of geographically identified dialects.

Armenian can be subdivided in two major dialectal blocks and those blocks into individual dialects, though many of the Western Armenian dialects have died due to the effects of the Armenian Genocide. In addition, neither dialect is completely homogeneous: any dialect can be subdivided into several subdialects. While Western and Eastern Armenian are often described as different dialects of the same language, some subdialects are not readily mutually intelligible. It is true, however, that a fluent speaker of one of two greatly varying dialects who is exposed to the other dialect over even a short period of time will be able to understand the other with relative ease.

Examples
English Eastern Armenian (Arevelahayeren) Western Armenian (Arevm'dahayeren)
Yes Ayo (այո) Ayo (այո)
No Voč (ոչ) Voč (ոչ)
Excuse me Neroġout'ioun (ներողություն) Neroġout'ioun (ներողութիւն)
Hello Barev (բարև) Parev (բարև)
How are you(formal) Vonts ek (ո՞նց եք) Inch bes es
What's up Inch ka chka (ի՞նչ կա չկա) Inch ga chiga
Please Khntrem (խնդրեմ) Khntrem (խնդրեմ), Hadjiss
Thank you Šnorhakal em (շնորհակալ եմ) Šnorhagal em (շնորհակալ եմ)
Thank you very much Šat šnorhakal em (շատ շնորհակալ եմ) Šad šnorhagal em (շատ շնորհակալ եմ)
Welcome Bari galoust (բարի գալուստ) Pari yegar / Pari yegak (բարի եկար / բարի եկաք)
Goodbye C'tesout'ioun (ցտեսություն) C'desout'ioun (ցտեսութիւն)
Good morning Bari louys (բարի լույս) Pari louys (բարի լոյս)
Good afternoon Bari òr (բարի օր) Pari òr (բարի օր)
Good evening Bari yereko (բարի երեկո) Pari irigoun (բարի իրիկուն)
Good night Bari gišer (բարի գիշեր) Kišer pari (գիշեր բարի)
I love you Yes siroum em k'ez (ես սիրում եմ քեզ) Yes kezi gë sirem (ես քեզի կը սիրեմ)
I am Armenian Yes hay em (Ես Հայ եմ)
I miss you Yes kezi garodtsa

Other distinct dialects include the Homshetsi language of the Hemshin people and Lomavren language of the Bosha, both of which are categorized as belonging to the Armenian language family.

Armenian language
Origin Armenian manuscript, circa 5th-6th century
History
Alphabet
Grammar
Dialects
Literature
Promotion and study
Related topics

Standardized forms

Armenian is a pluricentric language, having two standardized forms: Eastern Armenian and Western Armenian.

Historical Armenian dialects

In 1909, linguist Hrachia Acharian in his "Classification des dialects arméniens" ("Classification of Armenian dialects") surveyed many of the Armenian dialects in what is now present day Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Azerbaijan and other surrounding countries settled by Armenians. Unlike the traditional dialect division of Armenian into western and eastern dialects, Acharian divided Armenian into three main dialects based on which indicative particles are used. He labeled them as the -owm dialects, gë dialects, and -el dialects. These three major dialects were further divided into sub-dialects.

Eastern dialects

-owm Dialects
-el Dialects

Western dialects

gë Dialects

Indo-European linguistic comparison

Armenian is an Indo-European language, and so many of its Proto-Indo-European-descended words are cognates of words in other Indo-European languages such as English, Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit. This table lists only some of the more recognizable cognates that Armenian shares with English (more specifically, with English words descended from the Old English(Anglo-Saxon) language). (Source: Online Etymology Dictionary.)

Armenian English Latin Classical and Hellenistic Greek Sanskrit PIE
mayr "mother" mother (< OE mōdor) māter "mother" mētēr "mother" mātṛ "mother" *máH₂ter- "mother"
hayr "father" father (< OE fæder) pater "father" patēr "father" pitṛ "father" *pH₂tér- "father"
eġbayr "brother" brother (< OE brōþor) frāter "brother" phrātēr "brother" bhrātṛ "brother" *bʱráH₂ter- "brother"
dowstr "daughter" daughter (< OE dohtor) futrei "daughter" thugatēr "daughter" duhitṛ "daughter" *dʱugH₂-tér- "daughter"
kin "woman" queen (< OE cwēn "queen, woman, wife") gunē "a woman, a wife" gnā/jani "woman" *gʷén-eH₂- "woman, wife"
im "my" my, mine (< OE min) mei "my" emeo "my, of mine" mama "my" *mene- "my, mine"
anown "name" name (< OE nama) nōmen "name" onoma "name" nāman "name" *H₁noH₃m-n̥- "name"
owt' "8" eight (< OE eahta) octō "eight" oktō "eight" aṣṭa "eight" *H₁oḱtō(u) "eight"
inn "9" nine (< OE nigon) novem "nine" ennea "nine" nava "nine" *(H₁)néwn̥ "nine"
tas "10" ten (< OE tien) (< P.Gmc. *tekhan) decem "ten" deka "ten" daśa "ten" *déḱm̥ "ten"
ačk' "eye" eye (< OE ēge) oculus "eye" ophthalmos "eye" akṣan "eye" *H₃okʷ- "to see"
armownk "elbow" arm (< OE earm "joined body parts below shoulder") armus "shoulder" arthron "a joint" īrma "arm" *H₁ar-mo- "fit, join (that which is fitted together)"
çownk "knee" knee (< OE cnēo) genū, "knee" gonu "knee" jānu "knee" *ǵénu- "knee"
otk' "foot" foot (< OE fōt) pedis "foot" podi "foot" pāda "foot" *pod-, *ped- "foot"
sirt "heart" heart (< OE heorte) cor "heart" kardia "heart" hṛdaya "heart" *ḱerd- "heart"
kaši "skin" hide (< OE hȳdan "animal skin cover") cutis "skin" keuthō "I cover, I hide" kuṭīra "hut" *keu- "to cover, conceal"
mowk "mouse" mouse (< OE mūs) mūs "mouse" mus "mouse" mūṣ "mouse" *muH₁s- "mouse, small rodent"
kov "cow" cow (< OE ) bos "cattle", bum "cow" bous "cow" go "cow" *gʷou- "cow"
šown "dog" hound (< OE hund "hound, dog") canis "hound, dog" (canine) kuōn "hound, dog" śvan "dog" *ḱwon- "hound, dog"
tari "year" year (< OE gēar) hōrnus "of this year" hōra "time, year" yare "year" *yeH₁r- "year"
amis "month" moon, month (< OE mōnaþ) mēnsis "month" mēn "moon, month" māsa "moon, month" *meH₁ns- "moon, month"
amaṙ "summer" summer (< OE sumor) samā "season" *sem- "hot season of the year"
ǰerm "warm" warm (< OE wearm) formus "warm" thermos "warm" gharma "heat" *gʷʰerm- "warm"
lowys "light" light (< OE lēoht "brightness") lucere, lux, lucidus "to shine, light, clear" leukos "bright, shining, white" roca "shining" *leuk- "light, brightness"
howr "flame" fire (< OE fȳr) pir "fire" pur "fire" pu "fire" *péH₂wr̥- "fire"
heṙow "far" far (< OE feor "to a great distance") per "through" pera "beyond" paras "beyond" *per- "through, across, beyond"
helowm "I pour" flow (< OE flōwan) pluĕre "to rain" plenō "I wash" plu "to swim" *pleu- "flow, float"
owtem "I eat" eat (< OE etan) edulis "edible" edō "I eat" admi "I eat" *ed- "to eat"
gitem "I know" wit (< OE wit, witan "intelligence, to know") vidēre "to see" eidenai "to know" vid "to know" *weid- "to know, to see"
get "river" water (< OE wæter) utur "water" hudōr "water" udan "water" (*wodor, *wedor, *uder-) from *wed- "water"
gorç "work " work (< OE weorc) urgēre "push, drive" ergon "work" varcas "activity" *werǵ- "to work"
meç "great " much (< OE mycel "great, big, many") magnus "great" megas "great, large" mahant "great" *meǵ- "great"
ançanot' "stranger, unfamiliar" unknown (< OE uncnawen) ignōtus, ignōrāntem "unknown, ignorant" agnōstos "unknown" ajñāta "unfamiliar" *n- + *ǵneH₃- "not" + "to know"
meṙaç "dead" murder (< OE morþor) mortalis "mortal" ambrotos "immortal" mṛta "dead" *mrtro-, from (*mor-, *mr-) "to die"
mēǰteġ "middle" mid, middle (< OE mid, middel) medius "middle" mesos "middle" madhya "middle" *medʱyo- from *me- "mid, middle"
ayl "other" else (< OE elles "other, otherwise, different") alius, alienus "other, another" allos "other, another" anya "other" *al- "beyond, other"
nor "new" new (< OE nīwe) novus "new" neos "new" nava "new" *néwo- "new"
dowṙ "door" door (< OE dor, duru) fores "door" thura "door" dvār "door" *dʱwer- "door, doorway, gate"
town "house" timber (< OE timber "trees used for building material, structure") domus "house" domos "house" dama "house" *domo-, *domu- "house"
berri, berel "fertile, carry" bear (< OE beran "give birth, carry") ferre, fertilis "to bear, fertile" pherein "to carry" bharati "carry" *bʱer- "to bear, to carry"

See also

Footnotes

  1. language in Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
  3. Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction, Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009 p383.
  4. Armenian language - Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  5. Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction, Benjamin W. Fortson, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, p383.
  6. "Armenia as Xenophon Saw It", p 47, A History of Armenia. Vahan Kurkjian, 2008
  7. http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/books/read12.html
  8. Austin, William M. (January - March, 1942). "Is Armenian an Anatolian Language?". Language. 18 (1). Linguistic Society of America: 22–25. doi:10.2307/409074. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. Journal of the American Oriental Society 105.4 (1985) text
  10. James Clackson, Indo-European Linguistics, An Introduction (2007, Cambridge)
    Robert S.P. Beekes, Comparative Indo-European Linguistics, An Introduction (1995, John Benjamins)
    Oswald J.L. Szemerényi, Introduction to Indo-European Linguistics (1996, Oxford)
  11. “In some publications, the voiceless plosives are also defined as ejectives or glottalised. Glottalised plosives occur in various Armenian dialects and can also be found in the Eastern Armenian vernacular based on the Yerevan dialect, but according to normative grammars, SMEA shows no glottalised voiceless plosives.” Jasmine Dum-Tragut. Armenian: Modern Eastern Armenian. London Oriental and African Language Library, 2007, issn 1382-3485; p. 17
  12. The Armenian Dialects of Jerusalem by Bert Vaux, Harvard University
  13. "Online Etymology Dictionary". etymonline.com. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
  14. ^ The letter 'þ' was used in the Old English alphabet, and it was eventually replaced by the letters "th".
  15. The word "futrei" (daughter) in the Latin column is actually from an Italic sister language called Oscan.
  16. ^ The letter 'ç' is pronounced like the consonant cluster "ts", and in the Armenian words "çownk", "gorç", "meç", and "ançanot'", it corresponds to the PIE *g.
  17. ^ The words "bum" (cow), "pir" (fire) and "utur" (water) in the Latin column are actually from an Italic sister language called Umbrian.
  18. The word "yare" (year) in the Sanskrit column is actually from an Indo-Iranian sister language called Avestan.
  19. ^ The prefixes for "not" in Latin are "in-" and "i-", and "an-" and "a-" in Greek and Sanskrit, which correspond to the PIE *n-.

References

  • Adjarian, Herchyah H. (1909) Classification des dialectes arméniens, par H. Adjarian. Paris: Honoro Champion.
  • Clackson, James. 1994. The Linguistic Relationship Between Armenian and Greek. London: Publications of the Philological Society, No 30. (and Oxford: Blackwell Publishing)
  • Fortson, Benjamin W. (2004) Indo-European Language and Culture. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Holst, Jan Henrik (2009) Armenische Studien. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
  • Hübschmann, Heinrich (1875) "Über die Stellung des armenischen im Kreise der indogermanischen Sprachen," Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Sprachforschung 23.5-42. English translation
  • Mallory, J. P. (1989) In Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archaeology and Myth. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Vaux, Bert. 1998. The Phonology of Armenian. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Vaux, Bert. 2002. "The Armenian dialect of Jeruslame." in Armenians in the Holy Land. "Louvain: Peters.

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