enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of reconstructed Dacian words - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reconstructed...

    [11] [12] For example, Greek and Latin had no dedicated graphic signs for phonemes such as č, ġ, ž, š and others. Thus, if a Thracian or Dacian word contained such a phoneme, a Greek or Latin transcript would not represent it accurately. [13] This could result in the wrong cognate being selected to decipher the Dacian name.

  3. List of Romanian words of possible pre-Roman origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Romanian_words_of...

    According to Romanian historian Ion I. Russu , there are supposedly over 160 Romanian words of Dacian origin, representing, together with derivates, 10% of the basic Romanian vocabulary. [ 1 ] Below is a list of Romanian words believed by early scholars to be of Dacian origin, which have also been attributed to other origins.

  4. Dacian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacian_language

    Ptolemy gives a list of 43 names of towns in Dacia, out of which arguably 33 were of Dacian origin. Most of the latter included the suffix 'dava', meaning settlement or village. But, other Dacian names from his list lack the suffix, for example Zarmisegethusa regia = Zermizirga, and nine other names of Dacian origin seem to have been Latinised ...

  5. List of Dacian names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dacian_names

    According to Crossland (1982), the evidence of names from the Dacian, Mysian and Thracian area seems to indicate divergence of a 'Thraco-Dacian' language into northern and southern groups of dialects, but not so different as to rank Thracian and Dacian as separate languages, There were also the development of special tendencies in word ...

  6. Dacians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacians

    Roman head of a Dacian of the type known from Trajan's Forum, AD 120–130, marble, on 18th-century bust. The Dacians (/ ˈ d eɪ ʃ ən z /; Latin: Daci; Ancient Greek: Δάκοι, [1] Δάοι, [1] Δάκαι [2]) were the ancient Indo-European inhabitants of the cultural region of Dacia, located in the area near the Carpathian Mountains and west of the Black Sea.

  7. List of Romania county name etymologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Romania_county...

    Greek origin from Μουσαίος (Mousaios), the original name of the city of Buzău. Caraș-Severin: Turkish and Slavic Named after the Caraș River (Turkish Kara, "dark, black") and Turnu Severin (Romanian, "Northern Tower": turn is borrowed from German Türm, "tower"; severin is a Slavic word meaning "Northern"). Călărași: Romanian (Latin)

  8. List of ancient Daco-Thracian peoples and tribes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_Daco...

    Dacian toponyms, hydronyms and tribe names - Source texts of ancient Greek and Roman authors. - Strabo's work The Geography (Geographica). Book 7, Chapters 3 and 6, are about Dacia, Thracia, Danube region (Southeastern Europe).

  9. History of Dacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dacia

    Dacian warrior of the Arch of Constantine, from Trajan's Forum Dacian territorial evolution from Burebista to Decebalus. One of the new rulers after the dissolution of the great Burebista kingdom was Cotiso, who betrothed his daughter to the emperor Augustus, obtaining his five-year-old daughter, Julia, as his betrothed in return. [22]