Recommended Citation. Freeman, Philip (1999) "The Survival of the Etruscan Language," Etruscan Studies: Vol. 6, Article 2. Available at: The Etruscan Language The idea that the Romans got the alphabet from the Greeks is shorthand for something far more interesting: the The extinct Etruscan language of Italy has been a mystery for a long time, and even today only it's surface has only been scratched, with many Infobox Language name=Etruscan nativename=mechl Rasnal familycolor=Isolate states=Ancient Etruria region=Italian Peninsula extinct=1st century AD There are two hypotheses (from Wikipedia on Etruscan Origins): That is to say, the Etruscan language and culture disappeared, due to, (in all likelihood), Wikipedia - Etruscan Language Particularly detailed and well-made Wikipedia page, with the history of studies, classification, elements of phonology, The Etruscans has their own distrinct language and culture, but decoding the Etruscan language has been difficult. Some of the Etruscan letters found on a sandstone slab in the Mugello We hope to make inroads into the Etruscan language, Gregory The Etruscan language was the spoken and written language of the Etruscan civilization, in Italy, in the ancient region of Etruria (modern The Etruscan language persevered for some 300 years, until it was finally gone, and with it the remnants of the once powerful Etruscan The Etruscan language can be estimate as East Slavic one, resembling the Belarusian. Its name was Etrusetska mova,i.e. Etruscan language.From the Theresa Huntsman of Washington University in St. Louis wrote: The Etruscan language is a unique, non-Indo-European outlier in the ancient Greco-Roman Etruscan language. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better. Journal of the Etruscan Foundation 14 Rex Wallace presents the evidence for the Etruscan language and its structure, and provides Question 7 4 out of 4 points According to the Roman poet Virgil, the Romans trace their origins to the Selected Answer: Trojans. Correct Answer: Trojans. They acquired their alphabet from Phoenicians and Greeks but Etruscan language was not similar to theirs, though it was a distant relative to Greek. The Romans called the inhabitants of the ancient region of Etruria, in the north-central Italic So far, Etruscan seems to be unrelated to any major language. Etruscan language itself as evidence of extensive contact between the Etruscan language tell us about the situation of the Greek language in It is believed that the Etruscans spoke a non-Indo-European language, probably related to what is called the Tyrsenian language family, which is itself an isolate
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