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Encyclopedia > Palaic language

Palaic was one of the Anatolian languages, and as such a sister language of Hittite. It was probably spoken to the north of the Hittite core area, in the present north-central Turkey. It is only known from a handful of liturgical documents, written by Hittites employing the same cuneiform they used for Hittite. The language was most likely extinct by the 13th century BC. From what has survived, it emerges as a fairly typical Indo-European language. Among other things, it shows the same gender distinction as seen in Hittite, i. e. animate vs. inanimate.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Sacred language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (722 words)
The sacred language is typically vested with a solemnity and dignity that speech in the vernacular lacks.
Avestan, the language of the oldest portions of the Avesta, the sacred texts of Zoroastrianism.
Palaic and Luwian, cultivated as a religious language by the Hittites.
Palaic language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (291 words)
Palaic is an extinct Indo-European language, attested in cuneiform tablets in Bronze Age Hattusa.
The entire corpus of Palaic spans CTH 750-754 in Laroche's "catalog of Hittite texts"; in addition Hittite texts elsewhere cite passages in Palaic in reference to the god Zaparwa (Hittite Ziparwa) - totaling 21 passages, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Therefore Palaic is thought to belong to the Anatolian languages, although whether as a sister language to Old Hittite or Cuneiform Luwian is unknown.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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