Hamitic$505541$ - translation to ισπανικά
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Διαδικτυακό λεξικό

Hamitic$505541$ - translation to ισπανικά

Para-Nilotic languages; Nilo-Hamitic languages

Hamitic      
n. camítico, una de las lenguas no-semíticas perteneciente a la familia de lenguas afroasiáticas (primariamente lenguas del norte y este de Africa)
Hamite         
  • 1889 ethnographic map of Africa, with "Hamites" shown in white.
  • Beja]] were the model for the conflation of ethnic and linguistic evidence in the construction of Hamitic identity.
  • George Wells Parker, founder of the ''Hamitic League of the World''
  • Ham]]'s sons in blue, [[Shem]]'s sons in green.
  • Egyptian]] woman with ovoid facial profile, from [[Giuseppe Sergi]]'s ''The Mediterranean Race'' (1901).
  • Ham]]).
OUTDATED GROUPING OF HUMAN BEINGS
Hamitic languages; Hamite; Hamitic Myth; Hamitic myth; Hamitic hypothesis; Hamites (people); Hamitic races; Hamitic race; Chamitic; Anti-Hamitism; Antihamitism; Hamitic peoples; Hamitics; Hamitic people; Hamitic; Hemitic; Hamitic language; Anti-hamitism
camita

Ορισμός

Hamite
·noun A descendant of Ham, Noah's second son. ·see Gen. x. 6-20.
II. Hamite ·noun A fossil cephalopod of the genus Hamites, related to the ammonites, but having the last whorl bent into a hooklike form.

Βικιπαίδεια

Paranilotic languages

Paranilotic is a group of languages proposed by Carl Meinhof. Karl Lepsius had established the Nilotic languages as a family, with Western, Eastern, and Southern branches. Meinhof proposed that only Western were truly Nilotic, and that Eastern and Southern, which he called Nilo-Hamitic, were a mixture of (Western) Nilotic and Hamitic languages (in particular, modern Cushitic), based on racial and other non-linguistic considerations. Joseph Greenberg reverted to Lepsius's classification, as part of an attempt to remove racial classifications from African linguistics. However, Tucker and Bryan's (1956, 1966) influential surveys resurrected Meinhof's proposal under the name Paranilotic, and that name is still sometimes found, especially in non-linguistic works. Modern linguistics has discarded the concept of Paranilotic, seeing Nilotic more or less as Lepsius had, with three distinct branches.