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The Mongolic Languages

 (Google eBook)
Front Cover
Juha Janhunen
3 Reviews
Routledge, Jun 26, 2003 - Foreign Language Study - 464 pages
Once the rulers of the largest land empire that has ever existed on earth, the historical Mongols of Chinggis Khan left a linguistic heritage which today survives in the form of more than a dozen different languages, collectively termed Mongolic. For general linguistic theory, the Mongolic languages offer interesting insights to problems of areal typology and structural change. An understanding of the Mongolic language family is also a prerequisite for the study of Mongolian and Central Eurasian history and culture. This volume is the first comprehensive treatment of the Mongolic languages in English, written by an international team of specialists.
  

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Bu eserin altaistik, mongolistik ve türkoloji alanında çalışan araştırmacılar için çok faydalı, yol gösterici bir başvuru kitabı olbileceğini düşünüyorum ancak Türkiyeden bu kitaplara erişim oldukça çetin oluyor bu tür büyük yayınevlerini,n en azında Ankara ve Istanbul gibi yerlerde birer direkt başvurabileceğimiz yerleri olusa çok iyi olur:) 

Review: The Mongolic Languages

User Review  - Christopher - Goodreads

THE MONGOLIC LANGUAGES ed. Juha Janhunen is another entry in the Routledge Language Family Series. As is common with the other volumes in the series, it contains a chapter each for the various ... Read full review

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Contents

CHAPTER TWO WRITTEN MONGOL
30
CHAPTER THREE MIDDLE MONGOL
57
CHAPTER FOUR KHAMNIGAN MONGOL
83
CHAPTER FIVE BURYAT
102
CHAPTER SIX DAGUR
129
CHAPTER SEVEN KHALKHA
154
CHAPTER EIGHT MONGOLDIALECTS
177
CHAPTER NINE ORDOS
193
CHAPTER THIRTEEN SHIRAYUGHUR
265
CHAPTER FOURTEEN MONGGHUL
286
CHAPTER FIFTEEN MANGGHUER
307
CHAPTER SIXTEEN BONAN
325
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN SANTA
346
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN INTRAMONGOLICTAXONOMY
364
CHAPTER NINETEEN PARAMONGOLIC
391
CHAPTER TWENTY TURKOMONGOLICRELATIONS
403

CHAPTER TEN OIRAT
210
CHAPTER ELEVEN KALMUCK
229
CHAPTER TWELVE MOGHOL
248

Common terms and phrases

References to this book

From other books

Reciprocal Constructions

From Google Scholar

A Note on Verb/Object order and Head/Relative clause order
Guglielmo Cinque - 2005 - Working Papers in Linguistics
Cross-Cultural Similarities in Topological Reasoning
Marco Ragni, Bolormaa Tseden, Markus Knauff
Agriculture and phylic dispersals; re-evaluating the evidence
Roger Blench, Kay Williamson Educational Foundation
All Scholar search results »

References from web pages

Mongolic languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mongolic languages are a group of thirteen languages spoken in Central Asia. ... The Mongolic languages originated from the Proto-Mongolic language that ...
en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/ Mongolic_languages

nationmaster - Encyclopedia: Mongolic languages
The Mongolic languages are a group of thirteen languages spoken in Central Asia. Some linguists propose the grouping of Mongolic with Turkic (of which ...
www.nationmaster.com/ encyclopedia/ Mongolic-languages

Mongolic languages: Information and Much More from Answers.com
The Mongolic languages are a group of thirteen languages spoken in Central Asia. Some linguists propose the grouping of Mongolic with Turkic (of which ...
www.answers.com/ topic/ mongolic-languages

The suffix -cxa in Kalmyk: agreement marker or participant number ...
The Mongolic languages. London:. Routledge. 286-306. Newman, P. 1979. Some structural features of Chadic languages. – LACITIO – documents. Afrique, N3. ...
www.umr7023.cnrs.fr/ IMG/ pdf/ OskolskayaWSpl07.pdf

Review of Raymond J. Gordon, Jr. (ed.) 2005 Ethnologue: Languages ...
The Mongolic Languages. Routledge Family Se- .... In J. Janhunen (Ed.), The Mongolic Languages,. Routledge Family Series, pp. 102–128. ...
www.cs.chalmers.se/ ~harald2/ ethnologue.pdf

Contact in the prehistory of the Sakha (Yakuts): Linguistic and ...
1.1.4.1 The Mongolic languages................................................. ...............................19. 1.1.4.2 Origins of the Mongols and the ...
www.lotpublications.nl/ publish/ articles/ 002587/ bookpart.pdf

Endangered languages in Europe and North Asia
The classification of the Mongolic family has become increasingly clear thanks to a number of recent studies, summarized in The Mongolic languages (2003). ...
www.helsinki.fi/ ~tasalmin/ chris.html

@article {:12 October 2004:0001-6446:375, title = "Reviews ...
<I> The Mongolic Languages</I>; Faure, Bernard (ed.):<I> Chan Buddhism in Ritual Context</I>; Goddio, Franck-Pierson, Stacey-Crick, Monique: <I>Sunken ...
www.ingentaconnect.com/ content/ akiado/ aoash/ 2004/ 00000057/ 00000003/ art00007;jsessionid=3927hl8cfm0c9.alexandra?forma...

LINGUIST List 16.2637: General Linguistics: Gordon (2005)
The Mongolic Languages. Routledge Family Series. Routledge, London & New York. Jones, aa (1998). Towards a Lexicogrammar of Mekeo (An Austronesian ...
www.linguistlist.org/ issues/ 16/ 16-2637.html

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The Mongolic Languages. London: Routledge %D 2003 %E Janhunen, Juha %T Khamnigan Mongol %K Mongol (Khamnigan) %K Mongol (Khamnigan) %K Mongol (Khamnigan) %K ...
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About the author (2003)

Juha Janhunen is Professor and Chair of East Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Helsinki. His publications include Manchuria: An Ethnic History (1996), Material on Manchurian Khamnigan Evenki (1991) and Material on Manchurian Khamnigan Mongol (1990). His research interests include, in particular, the Samoyedic, Tungusic and Mongolic languages, though he has also worked on Japanese, Korean, Tibertan and Palaeo-Siberian.

Bibliographic information