Proper noun
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 South Asia.
- Synonym: Indic
1969, Gordon H. Fairbanks, “Comparative Indo-Aryan”, in Thomas A. Seboek, editor, Current Trends in Linguistics, volume 5, Linguistics in South Asia, page 40:Such a situation is not unusual in the history of languages, but Indo-Aryan has a very virulent case of the disease.
2016, Uta Reinöhl, Grammaticalization and the Rise of Configurationality in Indo-Aryan, →ISBN, page 9:This is another way in which a depiction of the historical developments in Indo-Aryan bears on the theory of phrase structure generally, and on the rise of adpositional phrases in Indo-European specifically, showing us alternative pathways of change.
2017, John J. Lowe, Transitive Nouns and Adjectives: Evidence from Early Indo-Aryan, →ISBN, page 53:Indo-Aryan has a very long history of attestation, from around 1400 bc to the present […]
Translations
family of languages
- Arabic: هِنْدِيّ-آرِيّ (hindiyy-ʔāriyy)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 印度-雅利安語/印度-雅利安语 (Yìndù-Yǎlì'ān-yǔ)
- Finnish: indoarjalainen (fi)
- French: indo-aryen (fr) m
- German: Indoarisch n
- Hindi: हिंद-आर्य (hind-ārya)
- Hungarian: indoárja (hu)
- Japanese: インド語 (Indo-go)
- Persian: هندوآریایی (hendo-âriyâyi)
- Russian: индоари́йский (ru) (indoaríjskij)
- Spanish: indo-ario m
- Sylheti: ꠁꠘ꠆ꠖꠥ ꠀꠞꠤꠀꠘꠤ (indu ariani)
- Urdu: ہند آریائی f (hind āriyā'ī)
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