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  1. Alexander Vovin. The Khüis Tolgoi inscription (early 7th c. AD), originally located in the vicinity of Tsetserleg city, nowadays in the basement of the National Museum of Archeology, Ulaanbaator, is written in a Mongolic language that is reasonably close to Middle Mongolian of 13-14th c. AD, but predates the latter by six centuries.

  2. The Khüis Tolgoi inscription1 Dieter Maue and Mehmet Ölmez with the cooperation of Étienne de la Vaissière and Alexander Vovin The stelae The Khüis Tolgoi site (48°08’14.8’’N 103°09’49.4’’E) was discovered by the Mongolian archaeologist D. Navaan in 1975. In 1979, Nejat Diyarbekirli announced this find.

  3. Alexander Vovin: A Reconstruction of Proto-Ainu, Leiden / New York / Köln 1993, E. J. Brill, (= Brill’s Japanese Studies Library, vol. 4), ISBN 90-04-09905-0. Krzysztof Witczak See Full PDF Download PDF

  4. 20 de may. de 2021 · Alexander (Sasha) Vladimirovich Vovin was born on January 27, 1961 and raised in Saint Petersburg in a multi-ethnic and multilingual family. His maternal grandfather Ya’akov (1901–1990) was trilingual in German, Yiddish and Russian, and his maternal grandmother Alexandra (1908–1975) was bilingual in French and Russian, but the common language was Russian, and due to the harsh realities ...

  5. Dr. Vovin was a world-renowned linguist who worked primarily on languages of the Far East, especially Japanese. He is perhaps best known for his takedown of Altaic in “The End of the Altaic Controversy” (himself being a former-Altaic-supporter-turned-opponent), as well as his several monumentally huge volumes on Old Japanese. He authored the English go-to reference for Old Japanese (A ...

  6. Alexander Vovin. The present article deals with the earliest known sources on a Mongolic language discovered in 2014 by the international team Dieter Maue (Germany), Mehmet Ölmez (Turkey), Étienne de La Vaissière and Alexander Vovin (both France) on two inscriptions. The importance of this discovery is threefold: first, it gives us a glimpse ...

  7. Alexander Vovin. This article, dedicated to the memory of Raoul David Findeisen (1958-2017), discusses some negative forms borrowed into Tungusic from Korean and Tungusic *kēta 'Siberian salmon' borrowed from Chukchi-Koryak in a wider North-East Asian context. Download Free PDF View PDF.