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Proposal regarding Western European languages
The Vasconic substrate hypothesis is a proposal that several Western European languages contain remnants of an old language family of Vasconic languages
Vasconic_substrate_hypothesis
Hypothesis about the history of Germanic languages
with Wiik's hypothesis.[citation needed] Theo Vennemann put forth the Vasconic substrate hypothesis in 2003, which posits a "Vasconic" substrate (ancestral
Germanic_substrate_hypothesis
Proposed language family including Basque and Aquitanian
Iberia Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula Proto-language Vasconic substrate hypothesis Artenacian culture Gorrochategui 1995, p. 54: "... linguistic
Vasconic_languages
Languages of Eurasia before the arrival of Indo-European languages
Indo-European, as originally thought by Krahe) Vasconic substrate hypothesis Tyrsenian languages Pre-Greek substrate languages, which may have included: Minoan
Pre-Indo-European_languages
Extinct language of the Iberian Peninsula
names across Europe. Like the better-known Vasconic substrate hypothesis, Coromines' Sorothaptic hypothesis has not been well received. Coromines, Joan
Sorothaptic_language
Pre-Roman languages indigenous to the Iberian Peninsula
Languages of Spain Languages of Portugal Hispano-Celtic languages Vasconic substrate hypothesis Paleo-European languages Pre-Indo-European languages "Populi"
Paleohispanic_languages
Language of the Basque people
claimed to identify a similarity between Iberian and Basque. Vasconic substratum hypothesis: this proposal, made by the German linguist Theo Vennemann,
Basque_language
European languages prior to the Bronze Age
substrate – underlies the development of Proto-Finnic; possibly related to the substrate in Sami Vasconic substrate hypothesis Pre-Albanian substrate
Paleo-European_languages
Oldest reconstructed stratum of European hydronymy
Germanic substrate hypothesis Pan-Illyrian theories Pre-Celtic Rigvedic rivers Tyrsenian languages Urnfield culture Vasconic substrate hypothesis "Old European"
Old_European_hydronymy
Disputed Pre-Indo-European Language Family
settlements in a language that he called "Vasconic". He considered some toponyms on the Atlantic coast to be neither Vasconic nor Indo-European, but to have derived
Atlantic_(Semitic)_languages
Term for a hypothetical homogeneous pre-Indo-European culture
Sorin Paliga, and the Vasconic substratum hypothesis of Theo Vennemann (also see Sigmund Feist's Germanic substrate hypothesis). According to Gimbutas'
Old_Europe_(archaeology)
Municipality in Agder, Norway
eagle". A link for the name also has been theorized to the Vasconic substrate hypothesis, for similarity to placenames like Val d'Aran and Arundel.[citation
Arendal
was later reiterated by Theo Vennemann in his Vasconic substrate hypothesis. The Pan-Illyrian hypothesis began with archaeological findings also its end
Pan-Illyrian_hypotheses
Era of pre-history prior to copper & bronze ages in each region
the so-called "Agricultural Substrate Hypothesis", based on the comparison of presumable Pre-Germanic and Pre-Greek substrate lexicon (especially agricultural
Neolithic_Europe
(which may itself have been an early form of Indo-European), a "Vasconic" substrate ancestral to the modern Basque language, or a more widespread presence
Prehistoric_Europe
of Prydain to refer to Britain as a whole. In support of the Vasconic substratum hypothesis, Vennemann notes the recurrence of the element aran, (Unified
Scottish_island_names
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
Boy/Male
Hindu
Virtues
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
This was the name of a poetess
Boy/Male
Tamil
Wealth
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Brave as Lion
Boy/Male
Irish American
Observant; alert; vigorous.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Tender, Beautiful, Delicate
Girl/Female
Muslim
Fruit, Summer fruit
Girl/Female
Muslim
Opening, Introduction, Dawn
Boy/Male
Tamil
Bron from a good family, Well-born
Female
Welsh
 Welsh name LINN means "lake" or "waterfall." Compare with other forms of Linn.
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
VASCONIC SUBSTRATE-HYPOTHESIS
a.
Alt. of Laconical
v. t.
To strew or lay under anything.
pl.
of Substratum
n.
An instance of laconic style or expression.
n.
A vigorous, brief manner of expression; laconic style.
n.
The permanent subject of qualities or cause of phenomena; substance.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Lustrate
a.
Curt; brief; laconic.
a.
Having very slight furrows.
n.
A salt of suberic acid.
a.
Of or pertaining to Freemasons or to their craft or mysteries.
n.
A substratum.
imp. & p. p.
of Lustrate
a.
Designating, or pertaining to, the series of rocks forming the Taconic mountains in Western New England. They were once supposed to be older than the Cambrian, but later proved to belong to the Lower Silurian and Cambrian.
v. t.
To subtract; to withdraw.
n.
That which is laid or spread under; that which underlies something, as a layer of earth lying under another; specifically (Agric.), the subsoil.
n.
Laconism.
v. t.
To make clear or pure by means of a propitiatory offering; to purify.
adv.
In a laconic manner.
a.
See Laconic, a.