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Tocharian
The spread of iron in Central Asia
Notes on Tocharian A o(k) ‘snake’, A oram and B sorromp ‘down’, B oṣno, B nanāmo ‘recognising’, B pāwe, and B †səwm- ‘trickle’
On a festive occasion
Preface
Review of Schmidt, K.T. (2018) Nachgelassene Schriften. 1. Ein westtocharisches Ordinationsritual. 2. Eine dritte tocharische Sprache: lolanisch.
Q sìyuàn yízhǐ chūtǔ de tǔhuǒluó B yǔ tíjì — Tocharian B Inscriptions From Ruin Q in Kocho, Turfan Region
Tocharian B santse ‘daughter-in-law’
The Formal Kharoṣṭhī script from the Northern Tarim Basin in Northwest China may write an Iranian language
The simplification of the Archaic Tocharian B clusters ltk and rtk – with a note on the vowel assimilation in Late Tocharian B oṅkorño
Tocharian A si ‘tail’
Review of Blažek, V.; Schwarz, M. (2017) Early Indo-Europeans in Central Asia and China: cultural relations as reflected in language
The population history of northeastern Siberia since the Pleistocene
Indo-Uralic, Indo-Anatolian, Indo-Tocharian
The deviant typological profile of the Tocharian branch of Indo-European may be due to Uralic substrate influence
Vernaculars of the Silk Road – a Tocharian B–Old Uyghur bilingual
Linguistic supplement
A comparison of the Tocharian A and B metrical traditions
On the part of speech and the syntax of the Tocharian present participle
On the East Iranian genitive plural ending
Interrogative stems in Hittite and Tocharian
137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes
The first horse herders and the impact of early Bronze Age steppe expansions into Asia
Linguistic supplement to Damgaard et al. 2018: Early Indo-European languages, Anatolian, Tocharian and Indo-Iranian

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