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  • ...Members of the Horde were predominantly [[Oghuz Turks|Oghuz]] — [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]-speaking people rather than Mongols. (Although the aristocracy was
    21 KB (2.943 kelime) - 12:28, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...nguage|Greek]], and ''[[knyaz]]e'', meaning "duke" or "prince" in [[Slavic languages|Slavic]]. Among the best known Bulgar khans were: [[Khan Kubrat]], founder ...f Kings]]"- is usually called [[Shah]], equally incorrect, in most Western languages) or described as "Great Khan" (like the Ottoman Padishah being called "Grea
    26 KB (3.821 kelime) - 12:36, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...: мурза; [[Bashkir language|Bashkir]]: mïrða; [[Northwest Caucasian languages|Circassian]]: мырзэ (common variance in [[Tatar]] nobility as [[Morza] ...n almost every old version of Persian, Arab, Caucasian, Turkish and Indian languages.
    20 KB (2.742 kelime) - 12:37, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...octrine of Freedom in the Korân | journal=The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures |date=April 1900 | volume=16 | issue=3 | publisher=Brill Ac
    170 KB (25.334 kelime) - 18:54, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...Members of the Horde were predominantly [[Oghuz Turks|Oghuz]] — [[Turkic languages|Turkic]]-speaking people rather than Mongols. (Although the aristocracy was
    21 KB (2.943 kelime) - 19:10, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...tween the early 14th and early 20th centuries. However, various non-Turkic languages continue to be spoken by minorities in Anatolia today, including [[Kurdish ...owever, it is clear that the [[Anatolian languages]], the oldest branch of Indo-European, have been spoken in Anatolia since at least the 19th century BC.
    42 KB (5.975 kelime) - 20:57, 8 Eylül 2019
  • |other_languages = See [[Languages of Russia]] ..."[[citizens of Russia]], regardless of ethnicity". Translations into other languages often do not distinguish these two groups.
    253 KB (34.667 kelime) - 19:22, 25 Mart 2017
  • ...ther extinct Turkic nations; Turkic languages largely replaced the Iranian languages spoken in the area. Central Asia is sometimes referred to as [[Turkestan]]. ...ian influence in the 1st century BC. [[Scythia]] (mostly [[Eastern Iranian languages|Eastern Iranian]]) is shown in orange.]]
    61 KB (8.681 kelime) - 19:23, 25 Mart 2017
  • |languages = [[Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet|Mongolian Cyrillic]]<br />[[Mongolian scrip === Languages ===
    105 KB (15.046 kelime) - 21:01, 8 Eylül 2019
  • .../kuzn.html Salminen, Tapani (2002): Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies]</ref> ...osing the theory</ref><ref>Krishnamurti, Bhadriraju (2003) ''The Dravidian Languages'' Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ISBN 0-521-77111-0 at p. 43.</ref>
    16 KB (2.365 kelime) - 17:52, 26 Mart 2017
  • |common_languages = [[Turkic languages|Turkic]] ...cksmiths.<ref name="Denis26">Denis Sinor, Inner Asia: history-civilization-languages : a syllabus, Routledge, 1997, ISBN 978-0-7007-0380-7, p. 26. Contacts had
    23 KB (3.431 kelime) - 18:19, 26 Mart 2017
  • |common_languages = [[Turkic languages|Turkic]] ...cksmiths.<ref name="Denis26">Denis Sinor, Inner Asia: history-civilization-languages : a syllabus, Routledge, 1997, ISBN 978-0-7007-0380-7, p. 26. Contacts had
    23 KB (3.431 kelime) - 18:19, 26 Mart 2017
  • |languages = [[Old Turkic language|Old Turkic]] ...W.-E. Scharlipp points out that many common terms in Turkic are [[Iranian languages|Iranian]] in origin.<ref>„(...) Über die Ethnogenese dieses Stammes ist
    14 KB (1.990 kelime) - 18:21, 26 Mart 2017
  • .../ref> <!-- Commented out due to lack of sources/verifiability: [[Tocharian languages|Tocharian]],{{citation needed|date=June 2016}} --> or multi-ethnic.<ref nam ...r (匈) has a possible similarity with the name "[[Huns|Hun]]" in European languages. The second character (奴) appears to have no parallel in Western terminol
    103 KB (15.025 kelime) - 18:27, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...as survived and its relationships have mainly been considered the [[Altaic languages]]. Numerous other ethnic groups were included under [[Attila]]'s rule, incl ...[[Hunnic language|Hunnic]]<br>[[Gothic language|Gothic]]<br>Various tribal languages
    68 KB (10.472 kelime) - 18:28, 26 Mart 2017
  • | langs = [[Turkic languages]] ...as parts of eastern Europe. They speak languages belonging to the [[Turkic languages|Turkic language family]].<ref name="Turkic people">[http://www.britannica.c
    116 KB (16.285 kelime) - 18:30, 26 Mart 2017
  • |family=[[Unclassified languages|Uncertain]] ...ports that Hunnish was spoken alongside [[Gothic language|Gothic]] and the languages of other tribes subjugated by the Huns.<ref>Priscus: ''Byzantine History'',
    16 KB (2.322 kelime) - 18:31, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...ry the remaining Shato branch of the Chuy tribe possibly joined [[Mongolic languages|Mongolic-speaking]] [[Tatar confederation]] in the territory of the modern ...imes linked to the [[Tukhara]] and [[Asii]] – [[Indo-European migrations|Indo-European peoples]] who had conquered [[Bactria]] (''Tukhara'') six centuries earlier
    11 KB (1.610 kelime) - 18:35, 26 Mart 2017
  • ...tern Oghuz]] branch of the [[Turkic languages]]. Examples of other [[Oghuz languages]] are [[Turkish language|Turkish]], [[Azerbaijani language|Azerbaijani]], [ ...cessdate=18 March 2015}}</ref> By 2000 BCE, various [[Proto-Indo-Europeans|Indo-European peoples]] began to settle throughout the region, as indicated by the finds
    34 KB (5.016 kelime) - 18:36, 26 Mart 2017
  • Findley assumes that the name Ashina comes from one of the [[Saka languages]] of central Asia and means "blue" or ''gök'' in Turkic. The color is ide ...was inherent in, it is the "prince of the tribe," Ashin, who will consider Indo-European origin. Rite of cremation did not spread among the common people of Turkic.
    27 KB (4.141 kelime) - 18:51, 29 Eylül 2019

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