Palaic language
Palaic | ||
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Spoken in |
formerly in Anatolia | |
speaker | extinct | |
Linguistic classification |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639 -1 |
- |
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ISO 639 -2 |
ine (other Indo-European languages) |
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ISO 639-3 |
The Palaic ( Heth . Palaumnili ) was developed in the 2nd millennium BC. Chr. In northern Anatolia spoken in the region Pala , northwest of the Hittite heartland, and was one of the Anatolian languages , a subgroup of the Indo-European languages . It came no later than the 13th century BC. Chr. Out of use.
Only about 200 words are known in Palaan ritual texts, which are preserved in cuneiform texts in the palace archives of the Hittite capital Ḫattuša .
A characteristic of Palaic was the occurrence of the labial fricative , which is missing in its sister languages , and which is reproduced in cuneiform alternating with pa or wa a , which is attributed to Hattic substratum . The name of the main Pala god Zaparwa is pronounced / Zparfa /.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Harold Craig Melchert: Anatolian Historical Phonology , pp. 206f. u. a.
literature
- Onofrio Carruba : The Palaic. Texts, grammar, lexicon. Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden 1970, ISBN 3-447-01283-8 ( studies on the Boǧazköy texts 10).
- H. Craig Melchert: Palaic. In: Roger D. Woodard (Ed.): The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge et al. 2004, ISBN 0-521-56256-2 , pp. 585-590.