(Redirected from Sino-Caucasian languages)
The 'Dené-Caucasian' (also called 'Sino-Caucasian' or 'Dené-Sino-Caucasian')
language family is a proposed
language superfamily containing at least the
Basque,
Caucasian,
Yeniseian,
Burushaski,
Sino-Tibetan, and
Na-Dené languages. Its existence is controversial; however, not much discussion between supporters and skeptics has happened yet, because most of the research on the hypothesis only started in the 1990s.
History of the hypothesis
The first glimpses appeared in the works of
Robert Bleichsteiner,
Karl Bouda,
E. J. Furnée,
René Lafon,
Edward Sapir,
Robert Shafer,
Morris Swadesh,
Olivier Guy Tailleur,
Vladimir N. Toporov,
Alfredo Trombetti and other scholars of the early 20
th century.
In the
1980s, it was
Sergei Starostin who, using strict linguistic methods (proposing
regular phonological correspondences,
reconstructions,
glottochronology, etc.) first put the idea that the 'Caucasian', 'Yeniseian' and 'Sino-Tibetan' languages are related on firmer ground.
[1][2]
In 1991, Sergei L. Nikolayev added the 'Na-Dené' languages.
[3] Their inclusion has been complicated by the ongoing dispute as to whether
Haida belongs to the family or not. The proponents of the Dené-Caucasian hypothesis incline towards supporters of Haida's membership in Na-Dené, such as Heinz-Jürgen Pinnow
[4][5][6][7][8][9][10] or, most recently, John Enrico.
[11] Interestingly enough, Edward J. Vajda, who otherwise rejects the Dené-Caucasian hypothesis, has suggested that
Tlingit,
Eyak, and the
Athabaskan languages are closely related to the
Yeniseian languages, but he denies any genetic relationship of the former three to Haida.
[12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] Vajda's ideas on the relationship of Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit and Yeniseian have found support independently in works of various authors, including Heinrich K. Werner
[21] or Merritt Ruhlen.
[RUHLEN, Merritt, 1998c. "The Origin of the Na-Dene." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 95: 13994–96.] DNA analyses have not shown any special connection between the modern Ket population and the modern speakers of the Na-Dené languages,
[22], but their relevance for stating a linguistic affinity is rather limited, as there is no direct correlation between genes and languages.
In 1996,
John D. Bengtson added the Vasconic languages (including 'Basque', its extinct relative or ancestor
Aquitanian, and maybe also
Iberian),
[23] and one year later he proposed the inclusion of 'Burushaski'.
[24] The same year, in his article for
Mother Tongue, Bengtson concluded '
Sumerian' might have been a remnant of a distinct subgroup of the Dené-Caucasian languages.
[25] It should be noted, however, that two other papers on the genetic affinity of Sumerian appeared in the same volume: while Allan R. Bomhard considered Sumerian to be a sister of
Nostratic,
[26] Igor M. Diakonoff compared it to the
Munda languages.
[27]
In 1998, Vitaliy V. Shevoroshkin rejected the
Amerind affinity of the 'Almosan' (
Algonquian-Wakashan) languages, suggesting instead their relationship with Dené-Caucasian.
[28] A few years later, he offered a number of lexical and phonological correspondences between the North Caucasian, the
Salishan, and the
Wakashan languages, concluding that the latter two might represent a distinct branch of the former and that they must have separated after the break of the
Avar-Andi-Tsezian unity in the period about the 2
nd-3
rd millennia BC.
[29][30]
Evidence for Dené-Caucasian
Main articles: Proto-Dené-Caucasian language,
Proto-Dené-Caucasian roots
The existence of Dené-Caucasian is supported by:
★ many words that correspond between some or all of the families referred to Dené-Caucasian;
★ regular sound correspondences between these words (so far only published for the Eurasian members of the superfamily);
★ the presence in the shared vocabulary of words that are rarely borrowed or otherwise replaced, such as personal pronouns (see below);
★ elements of grammar, such as
class prefixes (see below) and
case suffixes, that are shared between at least some of the component families;
★ a reconstruction of the sound system, much of the grammar, and much of the vocabulary of the superfamily's
most recent common ancestor, the so-called
Proto-Dené-Caucasian language.
Potential problems include:
★ the somewhat heavy reliance on the reconstruction of Proto-(North-)Caucasian by Starostin and Nikolayev.
[31] This reconstruction contains much uncertainty due to the extreme complexity of the sound systems of the
Caucasian languages; the sound correspondences between these languages are difficult to trace.
★ the use of the reconstruction of Proto-Sino-Tibetan by Peiros and Starostin
[32], parts of which have been criticized on various grounds
[33], although Starostin himself has proposed a few revisions.
[34]
Shared pronominal morphemes
Several roots can be reconstructed for the 1
st and 2
nd person singular pronouns. This may indicate that there were pronouns with irregular declension in Proto-Dené-Caucasian, like "I" vs "me" throughout Indo-European. In the daughter languages some of the roots are often affixes instead of independent pronouns.
The Algic,
[35] Salishan,
282930 Wakashan,
2930 and
Sumerian comparisons should be regarded as especially tentative because regular sound correspondences between these families and the more often accepted Dené-Caucasian families have not yet been reconstructed. To a lesser degree this also holds for the Na-Dené comparisons where sound correspondences have not yet been published.
/V/ means that the vowel in this position has not been successfully reconstructed, /K/ could have been ''any velar plosive?'', /S/ could have been ''any sibilant or assibilate?''.
'Footnotes':
1 Emesal dialect /ma(e)/;
2 Proto-Athabaskan
★ /ʃ/, Haida ''dii'' /dìː/;
3 Also in Proto-Southern 'Wakashan';
4 1st pl.;
5 Tlingit ''xa'' /χà/, Eyak /x/-, /xʷ/;
6 Proto-Athabaskan
★ /χʷ/-, Tlingit ''ÿi'' /ɰi/ > ''yi'' /ji/ = 2nd pl.; Tlingit ''i'' /ʔì/, Eyak /ʔi/ "thou";
7 Proto-Athabaskan
★ -, Haida ''dang'' /dàŋ/, Tlingit ''wa.é'' ;
8 Feminine;
9 Proto-Athabaskan
★ /wə/-, Eyak /wa/-, Tlingit ''wé'' , Haida'' 'wa'' /wˀà/;
10 2nd sg.
Shared noun class pre- and infixes
Noun classification occurs in the
Caucasian languages, Burushaski, Yeniseian, and the Na-Dené languages. In Basque and Sino-Tibetan, only fossilized vestiges of the prefixes remain.
[36]
''to be elaborated and corrected''
| Proto-Dené-Caucasian | Proto-Basque [a] | Proto-Caucasian [b] | Burushaski [c] | Proto-Sino-Tibetan [d] | Proto-Yeniseian [e] |
|---|
| /u̯/- | /o/-, /u/- | /u̯/- | /u/- | | /a/, /o/ |
|---|
| /j/ | /e/-, /i/- | /j/- | /i/- | /g/- (?) | /i/, /id/ |
|---|
| /w/ | /be/-, /bi/- | /w/-, /b/-, /m/- | | /b/-, /m/- | /b/ |
|---|
| /r/ | | /r/-, /d/- | | /r/-, /d/- | |
|---|
| /s/ | -/s/- | (-/s/-) | | /s/- | |
|---|
'Footnotes:'
a In Basque, the class prefixes became fossilized;
b In many Caucasian languages (28), systems of this type more or less persist to this day, especially in the East Caucasian languages,[37][38][39] whereas in West Caucasian, only Abkhaz and Abaza preserve a distinction human-nonhuman;37
c Burushaski seems to have reversed the first two animate classes,[40][41] which may have parallels in some East Caucasian languages, namely Rutul, Tsakhur, or Kryz; d As with Basque, the class system was already obsolete by the time the languages were recorded;[42]
''...to be completed soon...''
Family tree proposals
Starostin's view
The Dené-Caucasian family tree and approximate divergence dates (estimated by
modified glottochronology) proposed by S. A. Starostin and his colleagues from the Tower of Babel project:
[43]
:1. 'Dené-Caucasian languages' [8,700BCE]
::1.1.
Na-Dené languages (Athabascan-Eyak-Tlingit)
::1.2. Sino-Vasconic languages [7,900BCE]
:::1.2.1. Vasconic (see below)
:::1.2.2. 'Sino-Caucasian languages' [6,200BCE]
::::1.2.2.1.
Burushaski
::::1.2.2.2. Caucaso-Sino-Yenisseian [5,900BCE]
:::::1.2.2.2.1.
North Caucasian languages
:::::1.2.2.2.2. Sino-Yeniseian [5,100BCE]
::::::1.2.2.2.2.1.
Yeniseian languages
::::::1.2.2.2.2.2.
Sino-Tibetan languages
Bengtson's view
John D. Bengtson groups Basque, Caucasian and Burushaski together in a Macro-Caucasian family (see the section on
Macro-Caucasian below).
24 According to him, it is as yet premature to propose other nodes or subgroupings, but he notes that Sumerian seems to share the same number of isoglosses with the (geographically) western branches as with the eastern ones:
25
:1. 'Dené-Caucasian'
::1.1. The Macro-Caucasian family
:::1.1.1. Vasco-Caucasian
::::1.1.1.1. Basque
::::1.1.1.2. North Caucasian
:::1.1.2. Burushaski
::1.2............................................ (Sumerian?)
::1.3. Sino-Tibetan
::1.4. Yeniseian
::1.5. Na-Dené
Proposed subbranches
Macro-Caucasian
John Bengtson thinks that, within Dené-Caucasian, the Caucasian languages form a branch together with Basque and Burushaski, based on many shared word roots as well as shared grammar such as the following:
Shared suffixes
| ''Likely cognates of case endings'' |
|---|
| Basque Case | Basque | Burushaski | Caucasian | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absolutive | -0 | -0 | -0 | The absolutive form is generally used for the subjects of intransitive verbs and the direct object of transitive verbs. Special ergative forms are used for the subject of transitive verbs. |
|---|
| Ergative | -k | -k/-ak(1) | -k’ə(2) | (1) instrumental; (2) Kabardian ergative, Circassian (Adyghe) instrumental |
|---|
| Dative | -i | -e(1) | ★ -Hi(2) | (1) used as both ergative and genitive; (2) manifests as Avar -e (dative), Hunzib -i (dative) etc., shifted to instrumental in Lak, Dargwa, genitive in Khinalug, or ergative in Tsezian, Dargwa and Khinalug |
|---|
| Instrumental | -z [s] | -as/-áas(1) | ★ -s:-(2) | (1) cf. parallel infinitive -s in some Lezghian languages; (2) instrumental animate; general attributive, shifted to closely related functions in most modern languages, e.g. ergative animate in Chechen, adjectival and participial attributive suffix in Abkhaz etc. |
|---|
| Genitive | -en | | ★ -nV(1) | (1) attested as genitive in Lezghi, Chechen (also infinitive, adj. and particip. suff.), possessive in Ubykh etc.; in some languages the function has shifted to ablative (Avar), ergative (Udi, Ubykh) |
|---|
| Allative | -ra(1) | -r/-ar(2), -al-(3) | ★ -ɫV(4) | (1) some northern Basque dialects have the form -rat and/or -lat; (2) dative/allative; (3) locative; ''(4)'' Chechen -l, -lla (translative), Tsez -r (dative, lative), Khinalug -li (general locative) etc. |
|---|
| Comitative | -ekin | | ★ KV(1) | (1) possible cognates among mutually incompatible suffixes, cf. Avar -gu-n, -gi-n (comitative), Andi -lo-gu, Karata -qi-l, Tindi -ka, Akhwakh -qe-na. |
|---|
Karasuk
Main articles: Karasuk languages
George van Driem has proposed that the
Yeniseian languages are the closest known relatives of
Burushaski, based on shared grammar and some shared word roots. He does not seem to have considered the other language families that are hypothesized to belong to Dené-Caucasian, so whether the Karasuk hypothesis is really incompatible with the Macro-Caucasian hypothesis remains to be investigated.
Footnotes
1. STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1984. "Гипотеза о генетических связях синотибетских языков с енисейскими и северокавказскими языками [A hypothesis on the genetic relationships of the Sino-Tibetan languages with the Yeniseian and the North Caucasian languages]." In Лингвистическая реконструкция и древнейшая история Востока [Linguistic reconstruction and the ancient history of the East], part 4, pp. 19-38. Moscow: Академия наук, Институт востоковедения [Academy of sciences, Institute for Orientalistics]. [see Starostin 1991]
2. STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1991. "On the Hypothesis of a Genetic Connection Between the Sino-Tibetan Languages and the Yeniseian and North Caucasian Languages." In Shevoroshkin (1991), pp. 12–41. [Translation of Starostin 1984]
3. NIKOLA(Y)EV, Sergei L., 1991. "Sino-Caucasian Languages in America." In Shevoroshkin (1991), pp. 42–66.
4. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1985). Sprachhistorische Untersuchung einiger Tiernamen im Haida (Fische, Stachelhäuter, Weichtiere, Gliederfüßer, u.a.) [Language-historical investigation of some animal names in Haida (fish, echinoderms, mollusks, arthropods, and others]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Heft 39)
5. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1985a) (in four parts). Das Haida als Na-Dene-Sprache [Haida as a Na-Dene language]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Hefte 43–46)
6. Pinnow, Heinz-Jürgen (1986). Die Zahlwörter des Haida in sprachvergleichender Sicht [The numerals of Haida in comparative view]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Heft 47)
7. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1986a). Säugetiernamen des Haida und Tlingit: Materialien zu ihrer historischen Erforschung [Mammal names of Haida and Tlingit: materials to their historical investigation]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Heft 50)
8. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1988). Verwandtschafts- und andere Personenbezeichnungen im Tlingit und Haida: Versuch ihrer sprachhistorischen Deutung [Kinship and other person terms in Tlingit and Haida: attempt at their language-historical interpretation]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Heft 62)
9. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1990). Die Na-Dene-Sprachen im Lichte der Greenberg-Klassifikation [The Na-Dene languages in the light of the Greenberg classification]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Heft 64)
10. PINNOW, Heinz-Jürgen (1990a) (in two parts). Vogelnamen des Tlingit und Haida. Materialien zu ihrer sprachhistorischen Erforschung sowie Auflistung der Vogelarten von Alaska [Bird names of Tlingit and Haida. Materials to their language-historical investigation and list of the bird species of Alaska]. Nortorf: Völkerkundliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft. (Abhandlungen, Hefte 67–68)
11. Enrico, John. 2004. Toward Proto–Na-Dene. Anthropological Linguistics 46(3).229–302.
12. VAJDA, Edward J. 2000. Evidence for a genetic connection between Na-Dene and Yeniseian (Central Siberia). – Paper read at: January 2000 meeting of Society for the Study of Indigenous Languages of America (SSILA) and Linguistic Society of America (LSA)
13. VAJDA, Edward J. 2000a. Yeniseian and Na-Dene: evidence for a genetic relationship. – Paper read at: 38th Conference on American Indian Languages (SSILA), Chicago, Jan. 2000
14. VAJDA, Edward J. 2000b. Yeniseian and Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit.' – Paper read at: Linguistics Department Colloquium, University of British Columbia, Mar. 2000
15. VAJDA, Edward J. 2000c. Ket verb morphology and its parallels with Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit: evidence of a genetic link. – Paper read at: Athabaskan Language Conference, Moricetown, BC, June 9, 2000
16. VAJDA, Edward J. 2000d. Athabaskan-Eyak-Tlingit and Yeniseian: lexical and phonological parallels. Read at: 39th Conference on American Indian Languages, San Francisco, Nov. 14-18, 2000
17. VAJDA, Edward J. (2001): Toward a typology of position class: comparing Navajo and Ket verb morphology. Read at: SSILA Summer Meeting, July 7, 2001
18. VAJDA, Edward J. (2001a): Linguistic relations across Bering Strait: Siberia and the Native Americans. Read at: Bureau of Faculty Research, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA, March 8, 2001
19. VAJDA, Edward J. (2002): The origin of phonemic tone in Yeniseic. CLS 37 (Parasession on Arctic languages): 305-320
20. VAJDA, Edward J. (2004): Ket. (Languages of the World, Materials, 204) München: LINCOM Europa
21. WERNER, Heinrich K. (2004): Zur jenissejisch-indianischen Urverwandtschaft [On the Yeniseian-[American] Indian primordial relationship]. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz
22. RUBICZ, R., MELVIN, K. L., CRAWFORD, M.H. 2002. Genetic Evidence for the phylogenetic relationship between Na-Dene and Yeniseian speakers. Human Biology, Dec 1 2002 74 (6) 743-761.
23. BENGTSON, John D., 1996. "A Final (?) Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1." (see External links below)
24. BENGTSON, John D., 1997. "Ein Vergleich von Buruschaski und Nordkaukasisch [A comparison of Burushaski and North Caucasian]." Georgica 20: 88–94.
25. BENGTSON, John D., 1997a. "The riddle of Sumerian: A Dene-Caucasic language?" Mother Tongue 3: 63–74.
26. BOMHARD, Allan R., 1997. "On the origin of Sumerian." Mother Tongue 3: 75-93.
27. DIAKONOFF, Igor M., 1997. "External Connections of the Sumerian Language." Mother Tongue 3: 54-63.
28. SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 1998. 1998 Symposium on Nostratic at Cambridge. Mother Tongue 31, 28–32 (the whole issue as image files)
29. SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 2003. "Salishan and North Caucasian." Mother Tongue 8: 39–64.
30. SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 2004. "Proto-Salishan and Proto-North-Caucasian Consonants: a few cognate sets." in Nostratic Centennial Conference: the Pécs Papers. ed. by. I. Hegedűs & P. Sidwell, pp. 181–191. Pécs: Lingua Franca Group.
31. STAROSTIN, Sergei A. and NIKOLAYEV, Sergei L., 1994. "A Comparative Dictionary of North Caucasian Languages". Moscow.
32. PEIROS, Ilia, and STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1996. "A comparative vocabulary of five Sino-Tibetan languages". University of Melbourne Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics.
33. HANDEL, Zev Joseph, 1998. The Medial Systems of Old Chinese and Proto-Sino-Tibetan (free access). Ph.D. thesis, University of California at Berkeley.
34. STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 2004/05. Sino-Caucasian comparative phonology. (free access)
35. RUHLEN, Merritt, 2001d. “Taxonomic Controversies in the Twentieth Century,” in New Essays on the Origin of Language, ed. by Jürgen Trabant and Sean Ward, Berlin, Mouton de Gruyter, 197–214.
36. BENGTSON, John D., 2006. "Materials for a Comparative Grammar of the Dene-Caucasian (Sino-Caucasian) Languages."
37. CATFORD, J. C., 1977. "Mountain of Tongues: The languages of the Caucasus." Annual Review of Anthropology 6: 283-314.
38. SCHULZE-FÜRHOFF, Wolfgang, 1992. "How Can Class Markers Petrify? Towards a Functional Diachrony of Morphological Subsystems in the East Caucasian Languages." In The Non-Slavic Languages of the USSR: Linguistic Studies, Second Series, ed. by H. I. Aronson, pp. 183-233. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society.
39. SCHMIDT, Karl Horst, 1994. "Class Inflection and Related Categories in the Caucasus." In Non-Slavic Languages of the USSR, ed. by H. I. Aronson, pp. 185-192. Columbus, OH: Slavica.
40. BERGER, Hermann, 1974. Das Yasin-Burushaski (Werchikwar). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
41. BERGER, Hermann, 1998. Die Burushaski-Sprache von Hunza und Nager. 3 volumes. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
42. BENEDICT, Paul K., 1972. ''Sino-Tibetan: A Conspectus'': 103ff; Ed. by J. A. Matisoff. Cambridge University Press.
43. The preliminary phylogenetic tree according to the Tower of Babel Project
Other references
★
BENGTSON, John D., 2006. "Materials for a Comparative Grammar of the Dene-Caucasian (Sino-Caucasian) Languages."
★ BENGTSON, John D., 2004. "Some features of Dene-Caucasian phonology (with special reference to Basque)." In ''Cahiers de l'Institut de Linguistique de Louvain'' (CILL): 33–54.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 2003. "Notes on Basque Comparative Phonology." ''Mother Tongue'' 8: 21–39.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 2002. "The Dene-Caucasian noun prefix
★ s-." In ''The Linguist's Linguist: A Collection of Papers in Honour of Alexis Manaster Ramer'', ed. by F. Cavoto, pp. 53–57. Munich: LINCOM Europa.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1999. "Wider genetic affiliations of the Chinese language." ''Journal of Chinese Linguistics'' 27 (1): 1–12.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1999. "Review of R.L. Trask, The History of Basque." In ''Romance Philology'' 52 (Spring): 219–224.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1998. "Caucasian and Sino-Tibetan: A Hypothesis of S. A. Starostin." ''General Linguistics'', Vol. 36, no. 1/2, 1998 (1996). Pegasus Press, University of North Carolina, Asheville, North Carolina.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1997. "Ein Vergleich von Buruschaski und Nordkaukasisch [A comparison of B. and North Caucasian]." Georgica 20: 88–94.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1997. "The riddle of Sumerian: A Dene-Caucasic language?" ''Mother Tongue'' 3: 63–74.
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1996. "A Final (?) Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1." (see External links below)
★ BENGTSON, John D., 1994. "Edward Sapir and the ‘Sino-Dene’ Hypothesis." Anthropological Science (Tokyo) 102: 207-230.
★ CHIRIKBA, Vyacheslav A., 1985. "Баскский и северокавказские языки [Basque and the North Caucasian languages]." In Древняя Анатолия [Ancient Anatolia], pp. 95-105. Moscow: Nauka.
★ NIKOLA(Y)EV, Sergei L., 1991. "Sino-Caucasian Languages in America." In Shevoroshkin (1991), pp. 42–66.
★ RUHLEN, Merritt, 2001. "Il Dene-caucasico: una nuova famiglia linguistica." ''Pluriverso'' 2: 76–85.
★ RUHLEN, Merritt, 1998. "Dene-Caucasian: A New Linguistic Family," in ''The Origins and Past of Modern Humans—Towards Reconciliation'', ed. by Keiichi Omoto and Phillip V. Tobias, Singapore: World Scientific, 231–46.
★ RUHLEN, Merritt, 1998. "The Origin of the Na-Dene." ''Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the U.S.A.'' 95: 13994–13996.
★ RUHLEN, Merritt. 1997. "Une nouvelle famille de langues: le déné-caucasien," Pour la Science (Dossier, October), 68–73.
★ SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 2004. "Proto-Salishan and Proto-North-Caucasian Consonants: a few cognate sets." in ''Nostratic Centennial Conference: the Pécs Papers.'' ed. by. I. Hegedűs & P. Sidwell, pp. 181–191. Pécs: Lingua Franca Group.
★ SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 2003. "Salishan and North Caucasian." ''Mother Tongue'' 8: 39–64.
★ SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 1999 "Nostratic and Sino-Caucasian: two ancient language phyla." In ''From Neanderthal to Easter Island (Festschrift W. W. Schuhmacher)'', ed. by N. A. Kirk & P. J. Sidwell. pp. 44–74. Melbourne.
★ SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 1998.
1998 Symposium on Nostratic at Cambridge. ''Mother Tongue'' 31, 28–32 (the whole issue as image files)
★ SHEVOROSHKIN, Vitaliy V., 1991. (Ed.) Dene-Sino-Caucasian Languages. Bochum: Brockmeyer.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 2004–2005.
Sino-Caucasian comparative phonology &
Sino-Caucasian comparative glossary.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 2002. "A response to Alexander Vovin's criticism of the Sino-Caucasian theory." ''Journal of Chinese Linguistics'' 30.1:142–153.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 2000. "Genesis of the Long Vowels in Sino-Tibetan." In Проблемы изучения дальнего родства языков на рыбеже третьего тысячелетия: Доклады и тезисы международной конференции РГГУ [Problems of the research on the distant origin of languages at the beginning of the third millennium: Talks and abstracts of the international conference of the RGGU], Moscow 2000.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1996. "Word-final resonants in Sino-Caucasian." ''Journal of Chinese Linguistics'' 24.2: 281–311. (written for the 3
rd International Conference on Chinese Linguistics in Hongkong in 1994)
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1995. "Old Chinese Basic Vocabulary: A Historical Perspective." In ''The Ancestry of the Chinese Language'' (Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph No. 8), ed. by W. S.-Y. Wang, pp. 225–251. Berkeley, CA.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1994. "A Comparative Dictionary of North Caucasian Languages". Moscow. (see External links below)
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A. and Orel, V., 1989. "Etruscan and North Caucasian." ''Explorations in Language Macrofamilies''. Ed. V. Shevoroshkin. Bochum Publications in Evolutionary Cultural Semiotics. 23. Bochum.
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1991. "On the Hypothesis of a Genetic Connection Between the Sino-Tibetan Languages and the Yeniseian and North Caucasian Languages." In Shevoroshkin (1991), pp. 12–41. [Translation of Starostin 1984]
★ STAROSTIN, Sergei A., 1984. "Гипотеза о генетических связях синотибетских языков с енисейскими и северокавказскими языками [A hypothesis on the genetic relationships of the Sino-Tibetan languages with the Yeniseian and the North Caucasian languages]." In Лингвистическая реконструкция и древнейшая история Востока [Linguistic reconstruction and the ancient history of the East], part 4, pp. 19-38. Moscow: Академия наук, Институт востоковедения [Academy of sciences, Institute for Orientalistics]. [see Starostin 1991]
★ TRASK, R. L., 1994–1995. "Basque: The Search for Relatives (Part 1)." ''Dhumbadji!'' 2:3–54.
★ TRASK, R. L., 1995. "Basque and Dene-Caucasian: A Critique from the Basque Side". ''Mother Tongue'' 1:3–82.
★ TRASK, R. L., 1997. "Basque and the Superfamilies". The History of Basque, Routledge, London. (See especially pages 403–408.)
★ TRASK, R. L., 1999. "Why should a language have any relatives?" Pages 157–176 in: C. Renfrew & D. Nettle (eds.): Nostratic: Examining a Linguistic Macrofamily, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (UK).
★
VOVIN, Alexander, 1997. "The Comparative Method and Ventures Beyond Sino-Tibetan." ''Journal of Chinese Linguistics'' 25.2: 308–336.
★ VOVIN, Alexander, 2002. "Building a 'bum-pa for Sino-Caucasian." ''Journal of Chinese Linguistics'' 30.1: 154–171.
External links
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Dene-Caucasian ethno-linguistic map
★
The Tower of Babel(Site in English and Russian including
The proposed family tree&
Word-final Resonants in Sino-Caucasian)
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A Final (?) Response to the Basque Debate in Mother Tongue 1
See also
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Language families and languages
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Proto-language
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Borean languages
The individual Dené-Caucasian phyla:
:
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Basque
:
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Burushaski
:
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Caucasian
::
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West Caucasian
::
★
East Caucasian
:
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Sino-Tibetan
:
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Yeniseian
:
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Na-Dené
See also
★
Almosan
:
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Salishan
:
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Wakashan
:
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Algic