-
ethnolinguistic group formed by the
speakers of
Tungusic languages (or Manchu–
Tungus languages). They are
native to Siberia, China, and Mongolia. The Tungusic...
- The
Tungusic languages /tʊŋˈɡʊsɪk/ (also
known as Manchu–
Tungus and
Tungus) form a
language family spoken in
Eastern Siberia and
Manchuria by Tungusic...
- The
Provisional Tungus Central National Government (PT-CNG; Russian: Временное Центральное Тунгусское Национальное Управление, romanized: Vremennoye Tsentral'noye...
- Geirlaug, the
mother of
Tungu-Odd (
Tungu-Oddr). The
other was
named Ketil.
Further information appears in the Landnámabók (1.20).
Tungu-Odd is a
major character...
- minorities'
indigenous religions ■
Mongolian folk
religion ■
Northeast China folk
religion influenced by
Tungus and
Manchu shamanism;
widespread Shanrendao...
- the
Democratic Republic of Congo. The four
dialects (Beo, Buru (Boro),
Tungu, Hanga) are
quite distinct, and may be
separate languages.
Ngelima at Ethnologue...
-
Icelandic Language Day (Icelandic:
dagur íslenskrar
tungu, English: "day of the
Icelandic tongue") is a
festival celebrated on 16
November each year in...
-
Eskeri is the
Tungus creator god. He
retrieved magic mud from the
primeval waters and used it to form the Earth. Mike Dixon-Kennedy, 1998, ABC-CLIO publishers...
-
cataclysms remains a mystery... to a degree". Skeptoid. Furneaux, Rupert. The
Tungus Event: The
Great Siberian Catastrophe of 1908, (New York)
Nordon Publications...
- ISBN 0-399-52894-6. Friðriksson, Þorvaldur (2023). Keltar, áhrif á íslenska
tungu og menningu. Sögur útgáfa. ISBN 978-9935-31-187-0. This page or section...