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  1. La expansión afroasiática designa el proceso histórico-cultural y demográfico de difusión y migración de pueblos y culturas cuyos miembros eran hablantes de lenguas afroasiáticas, ocurrido en África y parte de Asia. Este artículo resume la prehistoria reconstruida de los pueblos afroasiáticos: semitas, egipcios, bereberes, etíopes ...

  2. This is what is stated in both proto-Afroasiatic and Afroasiatic homeland articles. Also, it is made clear that although the languages likely diversified from proto-Afroasiatic in northeast Africa, their ultimate origin prior to this is in the Levant in the Paleolithic, as per ALL of the genetic studies.

  3. The Afroasiatic homeland is the hypothetical place where speakers of the proto-Afroasiatic language lived in a single linguistic community, or complex of communities, before this original language dispersed geographically and divided into separate distinct languages.

  4. Reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic (Proto-Afrasian) (2005) Christopher Ehret (born 27 July 1941), who currently holds the position of Distinguished Research Professor at UCLA , is an American scholar of African history and African historical linguistics particularly known for his efforts to correlate linguistic taxonomy and reconstruction with the archeological record.

  5. Other articles where Proto-Afro-Asiatic language is discussed: Afro-Asiatic languages: Origins: …originated is referred to as Proto-Afro-Asiatic. Proto-Afro-Asiatic is of great antiquity; experts tend to place it in the Mesolithic Period at about 15,000–10,000 bce. There is no general consensus over the location of the Urheimat, the original homeland from which began the migrations into ...

  6. 3 de dic. de 2004 · In their Review “Farmers and their languages: the first expansions” (25 Apr. 2003, p. 597), J. Diamond and P. Bellwood suggest that food production and the Afroasiatic language family were brought simultaneously from the Near East to Africa by demic diffusion, in other words, by a migration of food-producing peoples. In resurrecting this generally abandoned view, the authors misrepresent ...

  7. Les langues chamito-sémitiques 1 — appelées aussi langues afro-asiatiques 2 — sont une famille de langues parlées principalement en Afrique du Nord, dans la Corne de l'Afrique, au Moyen-Orient, dans le Sahara et dans une partie du Sahel 3. Ces quelque 350 langues ont actuellement environ 410 millions de locuteurs 4.