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  1. 13 de oct. de 2008 · also, not liking prog does not immediately discredit his/her reviews. the reasons for liking/not liking it would. and I have to say I'm undecided. because if you look at the broad spectrum of rock music, prog is really just a small part which did NOT influence anything other than other prog. the rock aspect gets its stuff from true rock and also from the rock aspects of more mainstream rock ...

  2. 15 de oct. de 2021 · Similarly, Georgiy Starostin (2002) arrives at a tripartite overall grouping: he considers Afroasiatic, Nostratic and Elamite to be roughly equidistant and more closely related to each other than to anything else. Sergei Starostin's school has now re-included Afroasiatic in a broadly defined Nostratic, ...

  3. Georgiy Starostin, on the other hand, considered it the best song on the album. He criticized the lyrics but opined, "in comparison to, say, Led Zeppelin's flat-foot, gruff take on mysticism, this one is gentle, exotic and totally non-generic." Personnel. Source:

  4. Russian linguist and philologist. This page was last edited on 8 April 2024, at 18:41. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.By using this site, you agree to the Terms of ...

  5. Starostin, Georgiy. 2003. An irregular verb paradigm in Ket. STUF - Language Typology and Universals 56(1-2). 117-122. doi: 10.1524/stuf.2003.56.12.117.

  6. Starostin is particularly infamous for his unhelpful, often bizarre, and sometimes downright misleading style and citations, so it’s not surprising you’ve found a hard trail to follow. I would take absolutely anything they offer with a wheelbarrow full of salt, and always cross-reference it with an Indo-Europeanist (or scholar of whatever family) of a more “traditional” school of ...

  7. The Etymological Dictionary of the Altaic Languages is a comparative and etymological dictionary of the hypothetical Altaic language family.It was written by linguists Sergei Starostin, Anna Dybo, and Oleg Mudrak [], and was published in Leiden in 2003 by Brill Publishers.It contains 3 volumes, and is a part of the Handbook of Oriental Studies: Section 8, Uralic and Central Asian Studies; no. 8.