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  1. Proto-Uralic language. Proto-Uralic is the unattested reconstructed language ancestral to the modern Uralic language family. The hypothetical language is thought to have been originally spoken in a small area in about 7000–2000 BCE, and expanded to give differentiated Proto-Languages.

  2. El Protourálico es la lengua reconstruida no certificada ancestral de la familia de lenguas urálicas modernas. Se cree que el idioma hipotético se habló originalmente en un área pequeña alrededor del 7000-2000 a. C. y se expandió para dar protolenguas diferenciados.

  3. Proposed homelands of the Proto-Uralic language include: The vicinity of the Volga River, west of the Urals, close to the Urheimat of the Indo-European languages, or to the east and southeast of the Urals. Historian Gyula László places its origin in the forest zone between the Oka River and central Poland. E.

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

  5. In historical linguistics, the homeland or Urheimat ( / ˈʊərhaɪmɑːt / OOR-hye-maht, from German ur - "original" and Heimat, home) of a proto-language is the region in which it was spoken before splitting into different daughter languages.

  6. In the tree model of historical linguistics, a proto-language is a postulated ancestral language from which a number of attested languages are believed to have descended by evolution, forming a language family. Proto-languages are usually unattested, or partially attested at best.

  7. Recent progress in comparative linguistics, distributional typology, and linguistic geography allows a unified model of Uralic prehistory to take shape. Proto-Uralic first introduced an eastern grammatical profile to central and western Eurasia, where it has remained quite stable.