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