- Old Ossetic
- ISO 639-3 Code : oosISO 639-2/B Code : -ISO 639-2/T Code : -ISO 639-1 Code : -Scope : IndividualLanguage Type : Ancient
Names of Languages ISO 639-3 . 2013.
Names of Languages ISO 639-3 . 2013.
Ossetic language — Ossetian Spoken in Russia (North Ossetia) Georgia … Wikipedia
Old Persian language — Old Persian Spoken in Ancient Iran Era Ancestor of Middle Persian Language family Indo European Indo Iranian … Wikipedia
Old Azari language — This article is about the Iranian language of Azerbaijan. For the Turkic language of Azerbaijan, see Azerbaijani language. Azari آذری Āḏarī Spoken in Iran (Persia), Azerbaijan Region Middle East, Central Asia … Wikipedia
Ossetic language — ▪ Iranian language eastern Iranian language spoken in the northern Caucasus by the Ossetes. There are two major dialects: (1) eastern, called Iron, and (2) western, called Digor. The majority of the Ossetes speak Iron, which is the basis of … Universalium
Iranian languages — Major subgroup of the Indo Iranian branch of the Indo European language family. Iranian languages are probably spoken by more than 80 million people in southwestern and southern Asia. Only two Old Iranian languages are known, Avestan and Old… … Universalium
Scythian languages — Scythian Ptolemy s Scythia Spoken in Scythia Exti … Wikipedia
Iranian languages — This article is about the Iranian languages. For languages spoken in Iran, see Languages of Iran. For the official language of Iran, see Persian language. Iranian Geographic distribution: Southwest Asia, Central Asia, and western South Asia… … Wikipedia
Greek alphabet — Type Alphabet … Wikipedia
Ladislav Zgusta — (20 March 1924 27 April 2007) was an historical linguist and lexicographer of Czech origins. He was an emeritus professor of linguistics and classics at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. Bibliography * Die Personennamen griechischer … Wikipedia
Middle Iranian languages — Middle Iranian may refer to any of a group of the Indo European Iranian languages spoken between the 4th century BC and the 9th century AD: Western: Parthian (Northwestern) Middle Persian (Southwestern) Eastern: Bactrian Aryan Sogdian Khwarezmian … Wikipedia