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Indo-European linguistics is a hobby of mine, so I thought I would open it up to discussion.
Indo-European is the largest and most widely spoken language family in the world, spoken by half the planet. Because of that, it is the most widely documented. The family is made up of Germanic, Italic, Indo-Iranian, Slavic, Celtic, the extinct Tocharian and Anatolian branches as well as several independent languages Greek, Armenian, Albanian, and the extinct branches, Illyrian, Thracian and Phrygian (I tend to group the last six under the title Balkan due to geographic proximity)
Despite all the research and documentation, there are still several controversies in IE linguistics, one of which being where the homeland was.
In my view, it was on the steppes north of the Black Sea, for several reasons: 1. One it is roughly central to the distribution of the languages. 2. The steppe cultures were nomadic and extremely mobile, which would allow for the rapid expansions from India and Turkestan in the east to Western Europe. 3. Evidence of substrate languages can rule out most of Western Europe, India, Anatolia and Armenia. 3a. The grammatical restructuring of the fringe languages (Celtic, Anatolian, Tocharian) could be attributed to interference from substrate languages, as opposed to the conservatism of the Baltic and Slavic languages. 4. Seeming evidence of very early IE loans in Uralic, would indicate the languages were in close proximity early in their development.
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