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However, it has been difficult to find Ural-Altaic words shared across all involved language families.
These events contributed much to the revival of the Ural-Altaic self-awareness.
He formed the Ural-Altaic words with ease: Greeting to you.
Obsolete term for any historical Ural-Altaic people, in particular:
In languages belonging to the Ural-Altaic family, suffixes are predominantly added, rather than prefixes.
The word "kurultaj" and its variations in the Ural-Altaic languages translates as "meeting of the tribes".
The uncertain theory about Ural-Altaic proffers that there is a genetic relationship with this proto-language.
However, while the Ural-Altaic hypothesis can still be found in encyclopedias, atlases, and similar general references, it has generally been abandoned by linguists.
According to him its morphology "remotely resembles the Finno-Turki branch of the Ural-Altaic family."
At one time Uralic and Altaic were believed to form the Ural-Altaic group, though this theory has now been largely discarded.
Instead, candidates for Ural-Altaic cognate sets can typically be supported by only one of the Altaic subfamilies.
It is a subdivision of the Altaic subfamily of the Ural-Altaic family of languages.
In 1857, the Austrian scholar Anton Boller suggested adding Japanese to the Ural-Altaic family.
Baksu may come from a Korean adaptation of Ural-Altaic names for male shamans, such as baksi, balsi or bahsih.
In the long run, his theory proved unsound, but his Northern Division was renamed and re-classed as the Ural-Altaic languages.
(Vowel harmony is also typical of the neighboring Uralic languages and was often counted among the arguments for the Ural-Altaic hypotheses.)
Like the term Aryan, Turanian is used chiefly as a linguistic term, equivalent to Ural-Altaic linguistic group.
In effect, the three pillars of the Nostratic hypothesis are Indo-Uralic, Ural-Altaic, and Indo-Semitic.
Instead it adheres to Pan-Turanism, an ideology that asserts that Hungarians originate from the Ural-Altaic race.
In the ninth and tenth centuries, the Finns and the Magyars became the first Ural-Altaic peoples to arrive in Europe.
For much of the 19th and the early 20th centuries, the theory of a common Ural-Altaic family was widespread, based on such shared features as vowel harmony and agglutination.
Ural-Altaic, also Uralo-Altaic or Uraltaic, is an obsolete language-family proposal uniting the Uralic and Altaic languages.
Mongolian, the official language, is a member of the Ural-Altaic family of languages, which includes Finnish, Turkish, Kazak, Uzbek and Korean.
Elsewhere the notion had sooner fallen into discredit, with Ural-Altaic supporters elsewhere such as the Finnish Altaicist Martti Räsänen being in the minority.
Although it is commonplace in contemporary linguistic literature to reject the Ural-Altaic theory as such, the debate on possible genetic links between well established families is more animated than ever before.
Although Turanism is a political movement for the union of all Uralo-Altaic peoples, there are different opinions about inclusiveness.
A different etymology explains mudang as stemming directly from the Uralo-Altaic term utagan or utakan, for Central Asian female shamans.
Recherches sur le vocabulaire des langues ouralo-altaïques ('Research on the Vocabulary of the Uralo-Altaic Languages').
It implies not merely the unity of all Turkic peoples (as in Pan-Turkism), but also the alliance of a wider Turanid race, also known as the controversial Uralo-Altaic race, believed to include all peoples speaking "Turanian languages".