ındo

listen to the pronunciation of ındo
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von ındo im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

Indo
(isim) Hint
Indo
{i} Hint
Indo China
{i} hindiçini
Indo China
(isim) hindiçini
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von ındo im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

Indo
{i} India
Indo
Indo Gangetic Plain Indo Aryan languages Indo European languages
Indo-
Relating to Indo-European
Indo-
Relating to India
Indo-
Relating to the East Indies
Indo-Aryan
A speaker of Indo-Aryan languages
Indo-Aryan
A branch of Indo-Iranian and thus Indo-European language family, with a total number of native speakers of more than 900 million, chiefly in India
Indo-Aryan
Of or pertaining to Indo-Aryan languages and people
Indo-European
Of or related to the languages originally spoken in Europe and Western Asia
Indo-European
Of or related to the hypothetical parent language of the Indo-European language family. Also called Proto-Indo-European and abbreviated PIE
Indo-European
Proto-Indo-European: the hypothetical parent language of the Indo-European language family
Indo-European
Of or related to the hypothetical group of peoples that spread Indo-European languages
Indo-European
A member of the original ethnolinguistic group hypothesized to have spoken Proto-Indo-European and thus to have been the ancestor for most of India and Western Eurasia
Indo-European
A major language family which includes many of the native languages of Europe, Western Asia and India, with notable Indic, Iranian and European sub-branches
Indo-European root
A root, common to several words, that has its origin in the presumed proto-Indo-European language
Indo-European roots
plural form of Indo-European root Various constructed, hypothetic language components, theoretically formed from etymological clues of modern languages
Indo-Europeanist
A scientist (usually a linguist or anthropologist) engaged in Indo-European studies

The vast majority of Indo-Europeanists posit either three or four laryngeals for the Indo-European parent language, while Dolgopolsky posits a multitude of controversial phonemes here, most conveniently subsumed under cover symbols, without further explanation as to their phonetic make-up, their vowel-coloring or lengthening effects, or their development in the Indo-European daughter languages.

Indo-Germanic
Indo-European (hypothetical language)
Indo-Iranian
Of or relating to such a language or member
Indo-Iranian
A member of any peoples speaking such a language
Indo-Iranian
A branch of the Indo-European language family, including the Indic and Iranian languages
Indo-Pak
Refers to India and Pakistan, and may occasionally include Bangladesh

Indo-Pak War.

Indo-Semitic
Of or relating to both the Indo-European and the Semitic languages, or to a proposed ancestor of both

Western scholars consistent intent to exclude, without any evidence, the Ethiopic language as one of the possible original languages of the book , perhaps, suggests that the Ethiopic language is not part of the Indo-Semitic languages.

Indo-Semitic
Of or relating to India and Semitic peoples; for example, of or relating to Semitic (or supposedly Semitic) peoples of India

He proceeds, after mentioning that the Indo-Semitic, or Tuda, have massive heads, large eyes, and receding foreheads:.

Indo-Uralic
The [[#Adjective|Indo-Uralic]] languages: a proposed language family containing both the Indo-European and the Uralic languages

Other proposals, further back in time (and correspondingly less accepted), model PIE as a branch of Indo-Uralic with a Caucasian substratum;.

Indo-Uralic
Of or relating to both the Indo-European and the Uralic languages; especially, of or pertaining to a proposed language family containing both the Indo-European and the Uralic languages

Perhaps the most widely accepted proposal is of an Indo-Uralic family, encompassing PIE and Proto-Uralic.

Indo China
{i} Indochina, peninsula in southeastern Asia (occupied by Burma, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Malaysia)
Indo-
Indo- combines with nationality adjectives to form adjectives which describe something as connected with both India and another country. Indo-Pakistani talks. Indian and something else
Indo-African
of India and Africa
Indo-Aryan
Indo-European languages of India and Pakistan; one of the peoples of India of Aryan speech and characteristics; one of the early European invaders of Persia and India
Indo-Aryan languages
or Indic languages Major subgroup of the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. Indo-Aryan languages are spoken by more than 800 million people, principally in India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The Old Indo-Aryan period is represented by Sanskrit. Middle Indo-Aryan ( 600 BC-AD 1000) consists principally of the Prakrit dialects, including Pali. Modern Indo-Aryan speech is largely a single dialect continuum spread over an undivided geographical space, so demarcations between languages and dialects are somewhat artificial. Complicating the situation are competing distinctions between languages with an old literary tradition, local language identification by native speakers (as in censuses), supraregional languages such as Modern Standard Hindi and Urdu, and labels introduced by linguists, particularly those of George Abraham Grierson. In the centre of the Indo-Aryan speech area (the "Hindi zone"), covering northern India and extending south as far as Madhya Pradesh, the most common language of administration and education is Modern Standard Hindi. Important regional languages in the northern Indian plain are Haryanvi, Kauravi, Braj, Awadhi, Chhattisgarhi, Bhojpuri, Magahi, and Maithili. Regional languages in Rajasthan include Marwari, Dhundhari, Harauti, and Malvi. In the Himalayan foothills of Himachal Pradesh are Grierson's Pahari languages. Surrounding the Hindi zone, the most significant languages are, moving clockwise, Nepali (East Pahari), Assamese, Bengali, Oriya, Marathi, Gujarati, Sindhi, the speech of southern, northwestern, and northern Punjab province in Pakistan (called West Punjabi or Lahnda by Grierson), Punjabi, and Dogri. In Jammu and Kashmir and the far north of Pakistan are the Dardic languages; the most important are Kashmiri, Kohistani, Shina, and Khowar. The Nuristani languages of northwestern Afghanistan are sometimes considered a separate branch of Indo-Iranian. Sinhalese (spoken in Sri Lanka), Divehi (spoken in the Maldive Islands), and Romany are also Indo-Aryan languages
Indo-Chinese
{s} of or pertaining to Indochina
Indo-Chinese
{i} Sino-Tibetan; natives or inhabitants of Indochina
Indo-Chinese languages
languages of Indochina (peninsula in southeastern Asia)
Indo-European
the Indo-European group of languages includes English, French, Hindi, Russian, and most of the other languages of Europe and northern India
Indo-European
{s} of India and Europe
Indo-European languages
Family of languages with the greatest number of speakers, spoken in most of Europe and areas of European settlement and in much of southwestern and southern Asia. They are descended from a single unrecorded language believed to have been spoken more than 5,000 years ago in the steppe regions north of the Black Sea and to have split into a number of dialects by 3000 BC. Carried by migrating tribes to Europe and Asia, these developed over time into separate languages. The main branches are Anatolian, Indo-Iranian (including Indo-Aryan and Iranian), Greek, Italic, Germanic, Armenian, Celtic, Albanian, the extinct Tocharian languages, Baltic, and Slavic. The study of Indo-European began in 1786 with Sir William Jones's proposal that Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, Germanic, and Celtic were all derived from a "common source." In the 19th century linguists added other languages to the Indo-European family, and scholars such as Rasmus Rask established a system of sound correspondences. Proto-Indo-European has since been partially reconstructed via identification of roots common to its descendants and analysis of shared grammatical patterns
Indo-European languages
{i} family of languages including languages spoken in most of Europe and in Southwest and South Asia (also the languages spoken in the parts of the world colonized by Europeans since 1500 as well as in Persia,subcontinent of India and other parts of Asia)
Indo-Germanic
Indo-European, of or relating to Indo-European languages
Proto-Indo-European
Of or pertaining to the Proto-Indo-European language, or the people who spoke it
Proto-Indo-European
A person who spoke the Proto-Indo-European language
Proto-Indo-European
The hypothetical ancestor language or protolanguage of most European and Indian languages
Proto-Indo-Iranian
A person who spoke the Proto-Indo-Iranian language
Proto-Indo-Iranian
The hypothetical ancestor language or protolanguage of Indo-Aryan languages, the Iranian languages, the Dardic languages and the Nuristani languages
Proto-Indo-Iranian
Of or pertaining to the Proto-Indo-Iranian language, or the people who spoke it
Proto-Indo-European
(Dilbilim) 1. (noun) The reconstructed language that was the ancestor of the Indo-European languages.2. (adj.) Of, relating to, or being Proto-Indo-European or one of its reconstructed linguistic features
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von ındo im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

ındo avrupalı
Indo-European
ındo german
Indo-Germanic
ındo

    Türkische aussprache

    îndō

    Aussprache

    /ˈəndō/ /ˈɪndoʊ/

    Etymologie

    (combining form.) International Scientific Vocabulary, from Latin indicum; more at INDIGO.
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