View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Mongolic.
Mongolic
Mongolic meaning
A major language family spoken primarily in Mongolia and surroundings.
Synonyms of Mongolic
Example sentences (19)
It tries hard to distinguish loans between Turkic and Mongolic and between Mongolic and Tungusic from cognates; and it suggests words that occur in Turkic and Tungusic but not in Mongolic.
Againm in Inner Mongolia another closely connected core Mongolic Xianbei region was the Upper Xiajiadian culture (1000–600 BCE) where the Donghu confederation was centered.
Genghis Khan kept a close watch on the Mongolic supreme shaman Kokochu Teb who sometimes conflicted with his authority.
Georg et al. 1999: 81 Another view accepts Altaic as a valid family but includes in it only Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic.
Historically, Mongolic or Turkic monarchs have used the title khan and khagan (emperor) or khatun and khanum and Ancient Egypt monarchs have used the title pharaoh for men and women.
Hundred thousands Inner Mongols were massacred during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and China forbade Mongol traditions, celebrities and teaching Mongolic languages during the revolution.
In: Juha Janhunen (ed.) (2003): The Mongolic languages.
In sum, the idea was that Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages form a Sprachbund —the result of convergence through intensive borrowing and long contact among speakers of languages that are not necessarily closely related.
Janhunen, Juha The Mongolic languages, p.177 Elizabeth E. Bacon Obok: A Study of Social Structure in Eurasia, p.82 He reunited the Mongols again.
Poppe 1976: 470 Since then, the standard set of languages included in Macro-Altaic has been Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Korean, and Japanese.
Poppe considered the issue of the relationship of Korean to Turkic-Mongolic-Tungusic not settled.
Precursors Bronze 'fish tally' with Khitan script mainThe Xianbei spoke a proto-Mongolic language and wrote down several pieces of literature in their language.
The ethnic identity of the Xiongnu is uncertain, but the Xianbei appear to have been Mongolic.
The historical roots of the Buryat culture are related to the Mongolic peoples.
The Mongolic peoples, in particular the Borjigin, had their holiest shrine on Mount Burkhan Khaldun where their ancestor Börte Chono(Blue Wolf) and Goo Maral (Beautiful Doe) had given birth to them.
The Mongolic Rouran Khaganate (330–555), of Xianbei provenance was the first to use "Khagan" as an imperial title.
They are followed by Oirats, who belong to the Western Mongolic peoples.
Thomas Hoppe, Die ethnischen Gruppen Xinjiangs: Kulturunterschiede und interethnische, p. 66 The Khitan, however, had two scripts of their own and many Mongolic words are found in their half-deciphered writings.
Today the Mongolian peoples speak at least one of several Mongolic languages including Mongolian, Buryat, Oirat, Dongxiang, Tu, Bonan, Hazaragi, and Aimaq.