释义 |
Finnic /ˈfɪnɪk /adjective1Relating to or denoting a group of Finno-Ugric languages including Finnish and Estonian.The major languages of the indigenous minority and majority populations are Samisk, a Finnic language, and two official Norwegian languages, both of which are Germanic languages....- In the first place, the Lapps speak a Finnic dialect which is classified with the extinct Chude, spoken in the early centuries of the present era in Finland.
- It has been argued that a native Finnic population absorbed northward migrating Indo-Europeans who adopted the Finnic language.
2Relating to or denoting the group of peoples which includes the Finns.Of the non-Slavic peoples, the Germanic, Jewish, and Finnic were the most important; Jews were rare except in the western borderlands....- Some time after the middle of the seventh century, the Bulgars, a people of Hunnic and Finnic stock, who had been driven from their habitations on the Volga as far as the Lower Danube, began to make incursions into Moesia and Thrace.
- Essentially there were two Finnic groups; the Finns of Finland (and their kinsmen in Estonia), and the remnants of the Finnic tribes which had originally inhabited Muscovy.
Rhymesactinic, clinic, cynic, Jacobinic, rabbinic |