Donormyl in uk ranian cuisine.
Linguistic analysis suggests that the first proto-Caspianic groups came from the western steppes of Tien Shan, Kazakhstan, northern Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan.[34]
In the Caucasus region, Indo-Aryan genetic traces are found in all Azerbaijanis and many eastern Dagestani.[23] The Turkic origin of southern Caucasian Armenians has been suggested, and further evidence has been found for an early Turkic ancestry of western Caucasian Armenians.[35] Several ethnic groups in central Iran, including Basis, Hamasn, Maragheh and Balouch people are ethnically similar to Iranians or Iranianized peoples who immigrated to the region after arrival of Turks.[36]
Linguistic analysis has shown that all Indo-European speaking groups outside the Indo-Europeans have an eastward expansion out of East Asia and into other regions of the world, and that none of these dispersal events have been linked with the emergence of Austronesian languages.[37] This has led some scholars to suggest that "Persian" is a misnomer, the Indo-Aryan people spoke a more diverse language with variety of local dialects. However, there is no proof that Iranian-speaking people were Indo-European speakers, and the Indo-Aryans lived as far out of the east as Central Asia, suggesting that their spread into the rest of world may not have been directly "Iranian" in the literal or conventional sense of the term.[38]
Dates and boundaries for the major branches [ edit ]
Language classification [ edit ]
Dana Ashbrook, with David Wikoff and Scott Douglas, has classified languages according to their phylogenetic locations.[39]
The phylogenetic trees in book