Reconstructed ancestor of the Austronesian languages
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Proto-Austronesian is reconstructed by constructing sets of correspondences among consonants in the various Austronesian languages, according to the comparative method. Although in theory the result should be unambiguous, in practice given the large number of languages there are numerous disagreements, with various scholars differing significantly on the number and nature of the phonemes in Proto-Austronesian. In the past, some disagreements concerned whether certain correspondence sets were real or represent sporadic developments in particular languages. For the currently remaining disagreements, however, scholars generally accept the validity of the correspondence sets but disagree on the extent to which the distinctions in these sets can be projected back to proto-Austronesian or represent innovations in particular sets of daughter languages.
Blust's reconstruction
Below are Proto-Austronesian phonemes reconstructed by Robert Blust, a professor of linguistics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.[2] A total of 25 Proto-Austronesian consonants, 4 vowels, and 4 diphthongs were reconstructed. However, Blust acknowledges that some of the reconstructed consonants are still controversial and debated.
The symbols below are frequently used in reconstructed Proto-Austronesian words.
The diphthongs, which are diachronic sources of individual vowels, are:
*-ay
*-aw
*-uy
*-iw
Wolff's reconstruction
In 2010, John Wolff published his Proto-Austronesian reconstruction in Proto-Austronesian phonology with glossary.[3] Wolff reconstructs a total of 19 consonants, 4 vowels (*i, *u, *a, *e, where *e = /ə/), 4 diphthongs (*ay, *aw, *iw, *uy), and syllabic stress.
The following table shows how Wolff's Proto-Austronesian phonemic system differs from Blust's system.
Wolff's and Blust's PAn phonemes
Blust
*p
*t
*C
*c
*k
*q
*b
*‑D
*d‑ *‑d‑
*‑d
*z‑ *‑z‑
*‑j- *‑j
*g‑
*‑g- *‑g
*R
*m
*n
*N
*ñ
*ŋ
*l
*r
*s
*S
*h
*w
*y
Wolff
*p
*t
rejected
*k
*q
*b
*‑d
*d‑ *‑d‑
*‑j
*j‑ *‑j‑
*g
rejected
*ɣ
*m
*n
*ɬ
*ŋ
*l
rejected
*c
*s
*h
*w
*y
Historical overview of reconstructions for Proto-Austronesian
According to Malcolm Ross,[5] the following aspects of Blust's system are uncontroversial: the labials (p b m w); the velars k ŋ; y; R; the vowels; and the above four diphthongs. There is some disagreement about the postvelars (q ʔ h) and the velars g j, and about whether there are any more diphthongs; however, in these respects, Ross and Blust are in agreement. The major disagreement concerns the system of coronal consonants. The following discussion is based on Ross (1992).[5]
Otto Dempwolff's reconstruction of Proto-Malayo-Polynesian from the 1930s included:
Dental t d n l
Retroflex ṭ ḍ ḷ
Palatal t' d' n'
Palatal k' g'
Dyen (1963), including data from the Formosan languages, expanded Dempwolff's set of coronal consonants:
Further split d into D1 D2 D3 D4. He also believed that Dyen's c (Dempwolff's k') could not be reconstructed for Proto-Austronesian (he also split Dyen's w into w W and q into q Q, which were not accepted by later scholars.)
D1 D2 D3 D4 into d3 d2 d1 d3 (with the new d3 reflecting the combination of the old D1 and D4) and combined Dyen's S X x into a single phoneme S. He did accept Dyen's c but did not accept his T D. (He also renotated a number of phonemes in ways that were not generally accepted by later scholars.)
Blust based his system on a combination of Dyen, Tsuchida and Dahl, and attempted to reduce the total number of phonemes. He accepted Dahl's reduction of Dyen's S X x into S but did not accept either Tsuchida's or Dahl's split of Dyen's d; in addition, he reduced Dyen's s1 s2 to a single phoneme s. While accepting Dyen's c, he was hesitant about T and D (more recently, Blust appears to have accepted D but rejected T, and also rejected Z).
Ross likewise attempted to reduce the number of phonemes, but in a different way:
He accepts Dahl's d1 d2 d3 and also Z (eventually rejected by Blust). He notes that the distinction between d1 and d2 d3 is only reconstructable for the Formosan language groups Amis, Proto-Puyuma and Proto-Paiwan, and only Proto-Paiwan has a three-way distinction among d1 d2 d3; contrarily the distinction between Z and d1 is reconstructable only for Proto-Rukai and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, but not any of the previous three groups. However, he still believes (contra Blust) that the distinction among these phonemes is an inheritance from Proto-Austronesian rather than an innovation in the respective groups.
He notes that d1 occurs only morpheme-initially, while r occurs only morpheme-non-initially, and as a result combines the two.
He does not accept the phonemes c z ñ in Proto-Austronesian, and asserts that none of them are "readily reconstructable" outside of Proto-Malayo-Polynesian. Furthermore, while he believes that ñ was a general innovation in Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, c and z "are reflected differently from PMP [Proto-Malayo-Polynesian] *s and *d only in a fairly limited area of western Indo-Malaysia and appear to be the results of local developments".
He also reconstructs the coronals somewhat differently. He believes that C S l d3 were all retroflex (respectively, /tʂ/;/ʂ/or/ʃ/;/ɭ/or/ɽ/;/ɖ/), and s and L (Blust's N) were dental /s/ and /l/, as opposed to Blust's reconstruction as dental and palatal, respectively. According to Ross, this is based on their outcomes in the Formosan languages and Javanese; although their outcomes as dental/palatal is geographically more distributed, it occurs only in Malayo-Polynesian, which represent a single clade with respect to the Formosan languages.
As Proto-Austronesian transitioned to Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, Proto-Oceanic, and Proto-Polynesian, the phonemic inventories were continually reduced by merging formerly distinct sounds into one sound. Three mergers were observed in the Proto-Austronesian to Proto-Malayo-Polynesian transition, while nine were observed for the Proto-Oceanic to Proto-Polynesian transition. Thus, Proto-Austronesian has the most elaborate sound system, while Proto-Polynesian has the fewest phonemes. For instance, the Hawaiian language is famous for having only eight consonants, while Māori has only ten consonants. This is a sharp reduction from the 19–25 consonants of the Proto-Austronesian language that was originally spoken on Taiwan or Kinmen.
Blust also observed the following mergers and sound changes between Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian.[2]
Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian Sound Changes
However, according to Wolff (2010:241),[3] Proto-Malayo-Polynesian's development from Proto-Austronesian only included the following three sound changes.
PAn *ɬ > PMP *ñ, l, n
PAn *s > PMP *h
PAn *h > PMP *Ø
Proto-Oceanic merged even more phonemes. This is why modern-day Polynesian languages have some of the most restricted consonant inventories in the world.[2]
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian and Proto-Oceanic Sound Changes
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
Proto-Oceanic
*b/p
*p
*mb/mp
*b
*c/s/z/j
*s
*nc/nd/nz/nj
*j
*g/k
*k
*ŋg/ŋk
*g
*d/r
*r
*e/-aw
*o
*-i/uy/iw
*i
Unusual sound changes that occurred within the Austronesian language family include:[2]
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *w or *b > Sundanese c- or -nc-
The Austronesian languages of Taiwan, Borneo, Madagascar and the Philippines are also well known for their unusual morphosyntactic alignment, which is known as the symmetrical voice (also known as the Austronesian alignment). This alignment was also present in the Proto-Austronesian language. Unlike Proto-Austronesian, however, Proto-Oceanic syntax does not make use of the focus morphology present in Austronesian-aligned languages such as the Philippine languages. In the Polynesian languages, verbal morphology is relatively simple, while the main unit in a sentence is the phrase rather than the word.
Below is a table of John Wolff's Proto-Austronesian voice system from Blust (2009:433).[2] Wolff's "four-voice" system was derived from evidence in various Formosan and Philippine languages.
Proto-Austronesian voice system
Independent (non-past)
Independent (past)
Future-general action
Dependent
Subjunctive
Actor voice
-um-
-inum-
?
ø
-a
Direct passive
-en
-in-
r- -en
-a
?
Local passive
-an
-in-an
r- -an
-i
-ay
Instrumental passive
Si-
Si- -in- (?)
?
-an (?)
?
However, Ross (2009)[10] notes that what may be the most divergent languages, Tsou, Rukai, and Puyuma, are not addressed by this reconstruction, which therefore cannot claim to be alignment system of the protolanguage of the entire family. He calls the unit to which this reconstruction applies Nuclear Austronesian.
Interrogatives and case markers
The following table compares Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian question words.
Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian question words
English
Proto-Austronesian
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
what
*(n)-anu
*apa
who
*(si)-ima
*i-sai
where
*i-nu
*i nu
when
*ija-n
*p-ijan
how
*(n)-anu
*ku(j)a
how much
*pijax
*pija
Currently, the most complete reconstruction of the Proto-Austronesian case marker system is offered by Malcolm Ross.[2] The reconstructed case markers are as follows:
Proto-Austronesian case markers
Common nouns
Singular personal nouns
Plural personal nouns
Neutral
*[y]a, *u
*i
–
Nominative
*k-a
*k-u
–
Genitive
*n-a, *n-u
*n-i
*n-i-a
Accusative
*C-a, *C-u
*C-i
–
Oblique
*s-a, *s-u
–
–
Locative
*d-a
–
–
Important Proto-Austronesian grammatical words include the ligature *na and locative *i.[2]
Morphology
Morphology and syntax are often hard to separate in the Austronesian languages, particularly the Philippine languages.[2] This is because the morphology of the verbs often affects how the rest of the sentence would be constructed (i.e., syntax).
Affixes
Below are some Proto-Austronesian affixes (including prefixes, infixes, and suffixes) reconstructed by Robert Blust. For instance, *pa- was used for non-stative (i.e., dynamic) causatives, while *pa-ka was used for stative causatives (Blust 2009:282). Blust also noted a p/m pairing phenomenon in which many affixes have both p- and m- forms. This system is especially elaborate in the Thao language of Taiwan.[2]
Proto-Austronesian Affixes
Affix
Gloss
*ka-
inchoative (Formosan only), stative, past time, accompanied action/person, abstract noun formative, manner in which an action is carried out, past participle
A verbal prefix *paRi- is also reconstructed (albeit at the lower level of PEMPTooltip Proto-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian), for “reciprocal or collective action”;[14] it is particularly developed in Oceanic languages.[15]
Reduplication
CV (consonant + vowel) reduplication is very common among the Austronesian languages. In Proto-Austronesian, Ca-reduplicated (consonant + /a/) numbers were used to count humans, while the non-reduplicated sets were used to count non-human and inanimate objects. CV-reduplication was also used to nominalize verbs in Proto-Austronesian. In Ilocano, CV-reduplication is used to pluralize nouns.
Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian Pronouns
Type of Pronoun
English
Proto-Austronesian
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
1s.
"I"
*i-aku
*i-aku
2s.
"you/thou"
*i-(ka)Su
*i-kahu
3s.
"he/she/it"
*si-ia
*si-ia
1p. (inclusive)
"we (and you)"
*i-(k)ita
*i-(k)ita
1p. (exclusive)
"we (but not you)"
*i-(k)ami
*i-(k)ami
2p.
"you all"
*i-kamu
*i-kamu, ihu
3p.
"they"
*si-ida
*si-ida
In 2006, Malcolm Ross also proposed seven different pronominal categories for persons. The categories are listed below, with the Proto-Austronesian first person singular ("I") given as examples.[16]
Neutral (e.g., PAN *i-aku)
Nominative 1 (e.g., PAN *aku)
Nominative 2 (e.g., PAN *=ku, *[S]aku)
Accusative (e.g., PAN *i-ak-ən)
Genitive 1 (e.g., PAN *=[a]ku)
Genitive 2 (e.g., PAN *(=)m-aku)
Genitive 3 (e.g., PAN *n-aku)
The following is from Ross' 2002 proposal of the Proto-Austronesian pronominal system, which contains five categories, including the free (i.e., independent or unattached), free polite, and three genitive categories.[2]
Proto-Austronesian Personal Pronouns
Free
Free polite
Genitive 1
Genitive 2
Genitive 3
1s.
*[i-]aku
–
*=ku
*maku
*n-aku
2s.
*[i-]Su
*[i-]ka-Su
*=Su
*miSu
*ni-Su
3s.
*s(i)-ia
–
(*=ia)
–
*n(i)-ia
1p. (excl.)
*i-ami
*[i-]k-ami
*=mi
*mami
*n(i)-ami
1p. (incl.)
*([i])ita
*[i-]k-ita
*=ta
*mita
*n-ita
2p.
*i-amu
*[i-]k-amu
*=mu
*mamu
*n(i)-amu
3p.
*si-da
–
(*=da)
–
*ni-da
Nouns
Proto-Austronesian vocabulary relating to agriculture and other technological innovations include:[2]
Below are colors in reconstructed Proto-Austronesian, Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, Proto-Oceanic, and Proto-Polynesian.[2][19] The first three have been reconstructed by Robert Blust, while the Proto-Polynesian words given below were reconstructed by Andrew Pawley. Proto-Polynesian displays many innovations not found in the other proto-languages.
Colors
Color
Proto-Austronesian
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
Proto-Oceanic
Proto-Polynesian
white
*ma-puNi
*ma-putiq
*ma-puteq
*tea
black
*ma-CeŋeN
*ma-qitem
*ma-qetom
*quli(-quli)
red
*ma-puteq
*ma-iRaq
*meRaq
*kula
yellow
–
*ma-kunij
*aŋo
*reŋareŋa, *felo(-felo)
green
*mataq
*mataq
*karakarawa
*mata (?)
The Proto-Austronesians used two types of directions, which are the land-sea axis and the monsoon axis. The cardinal directions of north, south, east, and west developed among the Austronesian languages only after contact with the Europeans. For the land-sea axis, upstream/uphill and inland, as well as downstream/downhill and seaward, are synonym pairs. This has been proposed as evidence that Proto-Austronesians used to live on a mainland, since the sea would be visible from all angles on small islands.[2]
*daya: inland (also upstream/uphill)
*lahud: seaward (also downstream/downhill)
*SabaRat: west monsoon
*timuR: east monsoon
*qamiS: north wind
In Kavalan, Amis, and Tagalog, the reflexes of *timuR mean "south" or "south wind," while in the languages of the southern Philippines and Indonesia it means "east" or "east wind."
In Ilocano, dáya and láud respectively mean "east" and "west," while in Puyuma, ɖaya and ɭauɖ respectively mean "west" and "east."[20] This is because the Ilocano homeland is the west coast of northern Luzon, while the Puyuma homeland is on the eastern coast of southern Taiwan. Among the Bontok, Kankanaey, and Ifugaw languages of northern Luzon, the reflexes of *daya mean "sky" because they already live in some of the highest elevations in the Philippines (Blust 2009:301).
Also, the Malay reflex of *lahud is laut, which means "sea", used as directions timur laut (means "northeast", timur = "east") and barat laut (means "northwest", barat = "west"). Meanwhile, *daya only performs in barat daya, which means "southwest".
Numerals
Below are reconstructed Proto-Austronesian, Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, Proto-Oceanic, and Proto-Polynesian numbers from the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database.[21]
Note that *lima 'five', ultimately the root for 'hand', is not found for 'five' in some Formosan languages, such as Pazeh, Saisiat, Luilang, Favorlang and Taokas; numerals cognate with Proto-Malayo-Polynesian 6–10 are found in Amis, Basay, Bunun, Kanakanabu, Kavalan, Paiwan, Puyuma, Saaroa and Tsou. Pazeh, Favorlang, Saisiat and Taokas reflect *RaCep 'five'.
Laurent Sagart suggests that this was the PAn root, replaced by *lima in a lineage that lead to the remaining languages, rather than the reverse, because it seems to be retained in proto-Malayo-Polynesian in the forms 7, 8, 9, which appear to be disyllabic contractions of additive phrases attested from some of the western Formosan languages, especially Pazeh: Pazeh xaseb-uza 'six' (literally 'five-one'); xaseb-i-dusa 'seven' ('five-and-two'), with the bidu cognate with PMP *pitu; xaseb-a-turu 'eight' ('five-and-three'), with the baturu cognate with PMP *walu; xaseb-i-supat 'nine' ('five-and-four'), with the supa (< PAn *Sepat 'four') cognate with PMP *Siwa.[22]
Numerals
Number
Proto-Austronesian
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
Proto-Oceanic
Proto-Polynesian
one
*esa, *isa
*esa, *isa
*sa-kai, *ta-sa, *tai, *kai
*taha
two
*duSa
*duha
*rua
*rua
three
*telu
*telu
*tolu
*tolu
four
*Sepat
*epat
*pat, *pati, *pani
*faa
five
*RaCep > *lima
*lima
*lima
*lima
The Proto-Austronesian language had different sets of numerals for non-humans ("set A") and humans ("set B") (Blust 2009:279). Cardinal numerals for counting humans are derived from the non-human numerals through Ca-reduplication. This bipartite numeral system is found in Thao, Puyuma, Yami, Chamorro, and various other languages (however, Paiwan uses ma- and manə- to derive human numerals). In many Philippine languages such as Tagalog, the two numeral systems are merged (Blust 2009:280–281).
Basic numerals vs. human numerals
Number
Set A
Set B
Tagalog
one
*isa
*?
isa (A)
two
*duSa
*da-duSa
dalawa (B)
three
*telu
*ta-telu
tatlo (B)
four
*Sepat
*Sa-Sepat
apat (B)
five
*lima
*la-lima
lima (A)
six
*enem
*a-enem
anim (B)
seven
*pitu
*pa-pitu
pito (A)
eight
*walu
*wa-walu
walo (A)
nine
*Siwa
*Sa-Siwa
(siyam)
ten
*sa-puluq
*?
sampu
Proto-Austronesian also used *Sika- to derive ordinal numerals (Blust 2009:281).
Verbs
Below are reconstructed Proto-Austronesian, Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, Proto-Oceanic, and Proto-Polynesian verbs from the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database.
Verbs
Verb
Proto-Austronesian
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
Proto-Oceanic
Proto-Polynesian
to walk
*Nakaw
*lakaw, paNaw
*lako, pano
*fano
to swim
*Naŋuy
*naŋuy
*kakaRu
*kaukau
to know
*bajaq
*taqu
*taqu
*qiloa
to think
*nemnem
*demdem
*rodrom
*manatu
to sleep
*tuduR
*tuduR
*turuR
*mohe
to stand
*diRi
*diRi, *tuqud
*tuqur
*tuqu
to sew
*taSiq
*tahiq, *zaqit
*saqit, *turi
*tui
to die, be dead
*m-aCay
*m-atay
*mate
*mate
to choose
*piliq
*piliq
*piliq
*fili
to fly
*layap
*layap, Rebek
*Ropok
*lele
Monosyllabic roots
The following are monosyllabic Proto-Austronesian roots reconstructed by John Wolff (Wolff 1999).[23]
Forms which can be reconstructed as monosyllables with a great deal of certainty
^Tsuchida, Shigeru 1976. Reconstruction of proto-Tsouic phonology. Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Monograph Series, no. 5. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa
^Technically this is still part of the *S > *h sound change. The difference is that the preceding vowel changes as well.
^Blust, R. A. (2004). "*t to k: An Austronesian Sound Change Revisited". Oceanic Linguistics. 43 (2): 365–410. doi:10.1353/ol.2005.0001. S2CID143013834.
^Ross, Malcolm. 2009. "Proto Austronesian verbal morphology: A reappraisal." In Alexander Adelaar and Andrew Pawley (eds.). Austronesian historical linguistics and culture history: a festschrift for Robert Blust. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
^Only found in the central and southern Philippines as well as some parts of Borneo and Sulawesi.
^Found in the Formosan languages and possibly also in Cebuano.
^Used with insects, rainbows, storm/natural phenomena, various plant/animal names, etc.
^Ross, Malcolm (2006). Reconstructing the case-marking and personal pronoun systems of Proto Austronesian. In Henry Y. Chang and Lillian M. Huang and Dah-an Ho, eds, Streams Converging into an Ocean: Festschrift in Honor of Professor Paul Jen-kuei Li on His 70th Birthday, 521–564. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica.
^PMP *qayam means ;domesticated animal', PMP *manuk means 'domesticated fowl, chicken', and PMP *manu-manuk means 'bird'.
^Laurent Sagart (2004) The Higher Phylogeny of Austronesian and the Position of Tai-Kadai
^Wolff, John. 1999. "The monosyllabic roots of Proto-Austronesian." In Elizabeth Zeitoun and Paul Jen-kuei Li, eds. 1999. Selected papers from the Eighth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics, 139–194. Taipei, Taiwan: Academia Sinica.
Sources
Adelaar, A. (2005). The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar: A historical perspective. In A. Adelaar, & N. P. Himmelmann (Eds.), The Austronesian Languages of Asia and Madagascar. New York: Routledge. ISBN978-0-7007-1286-1, ISBN978-0-415-68153-7, ISBN978-0-203-82112-1
Bouchard-Côtéa, A., Hallb, D., Griffithsc, T. L., & Kleinb, D. (2012). Automated reconstruction of ancient languages using probabilistic models of sound change [1], PNAS, December 22, 2012.
Blust, R. A. (2009). The Austronesian Languages. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN978-0-85883-602-0.
Cohen, E. M. K. (1999). Fundaments of Austronesian Roots and Etymology. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University.
Dahl, Otto Christian. 1976. Proto-Austronesian (2nd, revised edition). Scandinavian Institute of Asian Studies Monograph Series, No. 15. London: Curzon Press.
Dahl, Otto Christian. 1981. Early phonetic and phonemic changes in Austronesian. Oslo: Instituttet for Sammenlignende Kulturforskning.
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British Army officer (1887–1976) General Montgomery redirects here. For other uses, see General Montgomery (disambiguation). Field Marshal The Right HonourableThe Viscount Montgomery of AlameinMontgomery in 1943Nickname(s)MontyThe Spartan GeneralBorn(1887-11-17)17 November 1887[1]Kennington, Surrey, EnglandDied24 March 1976(1976-03-24) (aged 88)Alton, Hampshire, EnglandBuriedHoly Cross Churchyard, Binsted, HampshireAllegianceUnited KingdomService/branchBritish ArmyYears of...
6th letter of the Latin alphabet This article is about the letter of the alphabet. For other uses, see F (disambiguation). Not to be confused with the long s, ſ. For technical reasons, terms beginning with F# redirect here. For other uses, see F-sharp and F*@bois. FF fUsageWriting systemLatin scriptTypeAlphabeticLanguage of originLatin languagePhonetic usage [f][ɸ~h][ʍ~xʷ][v]/ɛf/Unicode codepointU+0046 U+0066Alphabetical position6Numerical value: 6, 15HistoryDevelopment Ϝ ϝ ϛ𐌅F fTi...
2006 animated series based on the Marvel characters This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.Find sources: Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2014) Fantastic Four: World's Greatest HeroesGenreSuperheroBased onFantastic Fourby Stan LeeJack KirbyD...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Larsson. Björn LarssonBiographieNaissance 1953JönköpingNationalité suédoiseActivités Écrivain, professeur, spécialiste de littérature françaiseAutres informationsA travaillé pour Université de LundGenres artistiques Roman, roman policier, nouvelle, essaiSite web www.sol.lu.se/person/BjornLarssonDistinctions Tegnérpriset (d) (2008)Lunďan roku (d) (2015)Prix Médicis étrangermodifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Björn Larsson, né en ...
Artikel ini tidak memiliki referensi atau sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak bisa dipastikan. Tolong bantu perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan referensi yang layak. Tulisan tanpa sumber dapat dipertanyakan dan dihapus sewaktu-waktu.Cari sumber: 5 angka – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR ← 4 5 6 → −1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 → Daftar angka — Bilangan bulat ← 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 →KardinallimaOrdinal...
French-American actor (1899–1978) For the mathematician, see Charles P. Boyer. Charles BoyerBoyer in 1942Born(1899-08-28)28 August 1899Figeac, FranceDied26 August 1978(1978-08-26) (aged 78)Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.Burial placeHoly Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California, U.S.Alma materSorbonneOccupationActorYears active1920–1976Known forThe Garden of AllahAlgiersLove AffairLiliomGaslightSpouse Pat Paterson (m. 1934; died 1978)&...
Earth-penetrating nuclear weapon Subsidence craters remaining after underground nuclear (test) explosions at the north end of the Yucca Flat, Nevada test site A nuclear bunker buster,[1] also known as an earth-penetrating weapon (EPW), is the nuclear equivalent of the conventional bunker buster. The non-nuclear component of the weapon is designed to penetrate soil, rock, or concrete to deliver a nuclear warhead to an underground target. These weapons would be used to destroy hardened,...
American country singer (born 1964) Wynonna JuddJudd in 2018BornChristina Claire Ciminella (1964-05-30) May 30, 1964 (age 60)Ashland, Kentucky, U.S.OccupationsSingertelevision personalityYears active1983–presentSpouses Arch Kelley III (m. 1996, divorced) D. R. Roach (m. 2003; div. 2007) Scott Cactus Moser (m. 2012)Children2ParentNaomi Judd (moth...
American ice hockey player and executive (born 1968) For The Boston Globe ice hockey journalist, see Tom Fitzgerald (journalist). Ice hockey player Tom Fitzgerald Fitzgerald in 2012Born (1968-08-28) August 28, 1968 (age 55)Billerica, Massachusetts, U.S.Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)Weight 191 lb (87 kg; 13 st 9 lb)Position Right wingShot RightPlayed for New York IslandersFlorida PanthersColorado AvalancheNashville PredatorsChicago BlackhawksToronto Maple Lea...
Mickey RooneyLahirJoseph Yule, Jr.(1920-09-23)23 September 1920Brooklyn, New York, U.S.Meninggal6 April 2014(2014-04-06) (umur 93)Studio City, California, U.S.PekerjaanAktor, penyanyi, komedianTahun aktif1922–2014Tinggi5 ft 2 in (1,57 m)Suami/istriAva Gardner (m. 1942–1943)B. J. Baker (m. 1944–1948)Martha Vickers (m. 1949– ...
لمعانٍ أخرى، طالع سليمان (توضيح). هذه المقالة عن الملك سليمان في المعتقد الإسلامي. للمقالة التي تتحدث عن الملك بصفة عامة، طالع سليمان. سليمان بن داود إطارٌ مُخطَّط بخطِّ الثُّلث باسم النبي سليمان مرفوق بالسلام عليه ولقبه. تَاجُ الله الولادة القدس[1] الوفاة �...
Public research university in Christchurch, New Zealand This article is about the New Zealand university. For other uses, see Canterbury University (disambiguation). University of CanterburyTe Whare Wānanga o Waitaha (Māori)Logo with coat of armsFormer namesCanterbury CollegeMotto(Unofficial) Latin: Ergo tua rura manebunt (therefore the lands shall remain yours)TypePublic research universityEstablished1873; 151 years ago (1873)Academic affiliationACUAACSBAMBAEQUISENZN...