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	<title>FriederikeHallowell486 - История изменений</title>
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		<title>FriederikeHallowell486: Новая: Phrygia  germinated an advanced  Bronze Age culture.   The earliest  heritage of  Grecian  music  produced by  Phrygia,  conveyed  through the Greek colonies  in Anatolia, and included t...</title>
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		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;Новая: Phrygia  germinated an advanced  Bronze Age culture.   The earliest  heritage of  Grecian  music  produced by  Phrygia,  conveyed  through the Greek colonies  in Anatolia, and included t...&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Новая страница&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div&gt;Phrygia  germinated an advanced  Bronze Age culture.&lt;br /&gt;
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 The earliest  heritage of  Grecian  music  produced by  Phrygia,  conveyed  through the Greek colonies  in Anatolia, and included the Phrygian mode, which was  regarded to be the warlike mode in ancient Greek music. Phrygian Midas, the king of the &amp;quot;golden touch&amp;quot;, was tutored in music by Orpheus himself,  harmonizing  to the myth. Another musical invention that came from Phrygia was the aulos, a reed instrument  with two pipes. Marsyas, the satyr who first  organised the instrument using the hollowed antler of a stag, was a Phrygian follower of Cybele. He unwisely competed in music with the Olympian Apollo and  needs lost, whereupon Apollo flayed Marsyas alive and provocatively hung his skin on Cybele's own sacred tree, a pine. [http://langlearners.com/2011/phrygian-language/ script of the phrygians] is attested fragmentarily, known only from a  relatively small corpus of inscriptions. A few hundred Phrygian words are attested; however, the meaning  and etymologies of many of these remain unknown. The apparent similarity of the Phrygian language to Greek and its  unsimilarity with the Anatolian languages spoken by most of their neighbors is also taken as support for a European origin  of the Phrygians.&lt;br /&gt;
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[http://langlearners.com/2011/akkadian-language/ Language of the akkadians]  was  certified  in Sumerian texts in  proper noun from the late 29th  centuries BC. From the second half of the third millennium  BC (circa 2600-2500 BC), texts fully written in Akkadian begin to appear. Hundreds of thousands of texts and text fragments have been excavated  up to now; covering a vast textual tradition of mythological narrative, legal texts, scientific works, correspondence, political and military events, and many other  instances. By the second millennium BC, two variant forms of the language were in use in Assyria and Babylonia (known as Assyrian and Babylonian respectively). Within the Near Eastern Semitic languages, Akkadian forms an East Semitic subgroup (with Eblaite). This group distinguishes itself from the Northwest and South Semitic languages by its SOV word order, while the other Semitic languages  commonly  have either a VSO or SVO order. This novel word order is due to the influence of the Sumerian substratum , which has an SOV order.&lt;br /&gt;
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The Etruscan language was  talked and written by the Etruscan civilization, in what is present day  Italian Republic , in the ancient region of Etruria (modern  Toscana plus western Umbria and northern Latium) and in parts of Lombardy, Veneto, and Emilia Romagna (where the Etruscans were displaced by Gauls). Etruscan was  replaced  completely by Latin, leaving only a few  paperses and some loanwords in Latin, such as persona  (from Etruscan ersu), and some place-names, such as Roma. [http://langlearners.com/2011/etruscan-language/ Etruscan language] is known mainly from epigraphic records originating in the Tuscan area and dating from the 7th century bc to the first years of the Christian Era. There are some 10,000 of these inscriptions, mainly brief and  repetitive epitaphs or dedicatory formulas, as well as votive or owners  letterings on  pictures in tombs and  going with engraved  forms  on small  artefacts such as metal mirrors. There are, however, some  noteworthy exceptions to the general brevity of the  letterings, and there are  significant differences in their origins. The longest single text, of 281 lines (about 1,300 words), now in the National Museum at Zagreb, is written on a roll of linen that had been cut into strips and used in Egypt as a wrapping for a mummy; a clay  pad  found at Capua contains some 250 words; a stone  piece from Perugia has two adjacent sides elegantly engraved with an inscription of 46 lines (some 125 words); a bronze model of a liver found at Piacenza, which probably  corresponds the Etruscan microcosm in a form used for  direction in  fortune telling, has some 45 words; and a heavy rectangular block found on the island of Lemnos in the northern Aegean has an engraving  of what is probably a warrior with one inscription of perhaps 18 words surrounding  the head and another of 16 words in three lines on an adjacent side. In 1964 two inscriptions on gold tablets, one in Phoenician and the other in Etruscan, were  excavated at Pyrgi. The Etruscan language has been difficult to  examine , due to its being an  sequester . Bonfante, a leading  student in the field, says&amp;quot;... it resembles no other language in Europe or elsewhere...&amp;quot; The ancients were aware that Etruscan was an isolate. In the 1st century BC, the Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus stated that the Etruscan language was unlike any other .&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
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