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Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence |  | Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence: Encyclopedia II - Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence |  | |
Uralo-Siberian languages - Phonology.
The consonant inventories of the reconstructed protolanguages of the four Uralo-Siberian families are very similar to each other. A common feature is that there are only voiceless and no voiced stops, while there is a set of voiced (but no voiceless) non-sibilant fricatives with the same places of articulation (labial, dental, palatal and velar; in Chukotko-Kamchatkan and Eskimo-Aleut, also uvular). There are also nasals in the same places of articulation. In addition, there are three sibilants, and liquids and semivowels.
See also: Uralo-Siberian languages, Uralo-Siberian languages - History, Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence, Uralo-Siberian languages - Phonology, Uralo-Siberian languages - Morphology, Uralo-Siberian languages - Lexicon, Uralo-Siberian languages - Sources |  | | Uralo-Siberian languages, Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence, Uralo-Siberian languages - History, Uralo-Siberian languages - Lexicon, Uralo-Siberian languages - Morphology, Uralo-Siberian languages - Phonology, Uralo-Siberian languages - Sources, Indo-Uralic languages, Ural-Altaic languages, Eurasiatic languages, Nostratic languages |  | |
|  |  | Uralo-Siberian languages: Encyclopedia II - Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence
Uralo-Siberian languages - Evidence
Uralo-Siberian languages - Phonology
The consonant inventories of the reconstructed protolanguages of the four Uralo-Siberian families are very similar to each other. A common feature is that there are only voiceless and no voiced stops, while there is a set of voiced (but no voiceless) non-sibilant fricatives with the same places of articulation (labial, dental, palatal and velar; in Chukotko-Kamchatkan and Eskimo-Aleut, also uvular). There are also nasals in the same places of articulation. In addition, there are three sibilants, and liquids and semivowels.
Uralo-Siberian languages - Morphology
Apparently shared elements of Uralo-Siberian morphology include the following:
Uralo-Siberian languages - Lexicon
Fortescue (1998) lists 95 lexical correspondence sets with reflexes in at least three of the four language families, and even more shared by two of the languages. Examples are *ap(p)a 'grandfather', *kaư'a 'mountain' and many others.
Other related archives1746, 1959, 1962, 1998, Chukotko-Kamchatkan, Eskimo-Aleut, Eurasiatic languages, Greenlandic, Historical linguistics, Hungarian, Indo-Uralic languages, Morris Swadesh, Nostratic languages, Proposed language families, Rasmus Rask, Ural-Altaic languages, Uralic, Yukaghir, language family, lexical correspondence
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Evidence", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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