RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.

3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 58 of 187

E_5_10 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World

The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th

Justinianic plague Yersinia pestis pandemic Byzantine Empire Procopius plague of Justinian
E_5_06 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_06 — Holocene Sixth Mass Extinction: Current Biodiversity Crisis

The Holocene "Sixth Mass Extinction" hypothesis holds that current species loss rates are 100–1,000 times the normal background extinction rate, driven primarily by human activity: habitat destruction, overexploitation,

sixth extinction Holocene Anthropocene biodiversity loss IUCN Red List background extinction rate
E_5_02 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_02 — The Ordovician-Silurian Mass Extinction

The Late Ordovician mass extinction (c. 445–444 million years ago, at the Ordovician-Silurian boundary) was the second-most severe extinction event in Earth's history in terms of percentage of species lost — approximatel

Ordovician Silurian mass extinction Hirnantian glaciation Late Ordovician graptolites
E_5_05 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_5_05 — Late Devonian Mass Extinction: Kellwasser and Hangenberg Events

The Late Devonian mass extinction (~372–359 Ma) was not a single catastrophe but a series of extinction pulses spanning approximately 25 million years, making it unique among the "Big Five" mass extinctions. The two most

mass extinction Devonian Kellwasser Hangenberg reef collapse anoxia
ZG_2_06 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_06 — Historical Linguistics and Language Family Classification

Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, how they are related to each other, and how they can be grouped into language families descended from common ancestors. The discipline's c

historical linguistics comparative method language family proto-language sound change Grimm's law
ZG_2_16 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_16 — Khoisan Click Languages & African Linguistic Diversity

Click consonants — produced by rarefaction of air using the tongue against various parts of the oral cavity — are among the most phonetically complex sounds in human language, found as regular phonemes in approximately 3

click consonants Khoisan Tuu Kx'a Khoe-Kwadi Hadza
ZG_2_01 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_01 — Proto-Indo-European — Reconstruction, Homeland, and Migration

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European language family — the most widely spoken language family on Earth, encompassing ~3.2 billion native speakers across branches including I

Proto-Indo-European PIE comparative method Indo-European Kurgan hypothesis Anatolian hypothesis
ZG_2_18 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_18 — Pragmatics & Speech Act Theory: Language in Context, Meaning Beyond Words

Pragmatics — the branch of linguistics concerned with how context, speaker intention, shared knowledge, and social relationships contribute to meaning beyond the literal semantic content of words — addresses a fundamenta

pragmatics speech-act-theory illocutionary-force implicature conversational-maxims performative-utterance
ZG_2_02 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_02 — Pidgins, Creoles, and Language Contact Phenomena

Pidgins and creoles are languages born from contact between groups with no shared language — they offer a natural laboratory for studying how human linguistic capacity creates new grammatical systems under extreme condit

pidgin creole creolization language contact lingua franca substrate
ZG_2_09 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_09 — Tok Pisin, Lingua Francas, and Global Contact Languages

A lingua franca (from medieval Italian — originally denoting the pidginized Romance-based trade language of the Mediterranean, the "Frankish tongue") is any language used as a common medium of communication between speak

lingua franca Tok Pisin pidgin creole contact language trade language
ZG_2_13 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_13 — Dialectology: Regional Variation, Dialect Continua, and Isoglosses

Dialectology — the systematic study of regional linguistic variation — investigates how languages differ from place to place, mapping the geographical distribution of pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, and usage pattern

dialectology dialect isogloss dialect continuum dialect atlas linguistic atlas
ZG_2_14 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_14 — Historical Pragmatics: Speech Acts and Politeness Across Centuries

Historical pragmatics investigates how language use in context — speech acts, politeness strategies, discourse organization, implicature, and interpersonal meaning — has changed over time. Where historical linguistics tr

historical pragmatics speech act politeness face Brown and Levinson diachronic pragmatics
ZG_2_05 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_05 — Sacred Languages — Sanskrit, Hebrew, Arabic, Latin

Across civilizations, certain languages have been elevated above the ordinary functions of communication to the status of sacred or liturgical languages — vehicles believed to possess special power by virtue of their con

sacred language liturgical language Sanskrit Hebrew Arabic Latin
ZG_2_11 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_11 — Language Isolates: Basque, Ainu, Sumerian, Burushaski

A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genealogical (genetic) relationship with any other known language — it stands alone, unrelated to any language family, a sole surviving branch on the tree of huma

language isolate Basque Euskara Ainu Sumerian Burushaski
ZG_2_03 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_03 — Endangered Languages and Revitalization Movements

Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken in the world today, linguists estimate that 40–50% are endangered — meaning they are no longer being learned by children and will likely cease to be spoken within one to two ge

endangered language language death language revitalization language shift UNESCO Atlas last speaker
ZG_2_19 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_19 — Creole Languages & Contact Linguistics

Creole languages — fully grammaticalized natural languages that arise from contact between speakers of mutually unintelligible languages — are among the most important phenomena in linguistics, bearing directly on fundam

creole pidgin contact linguistics creolization substrate superstrate
ZG_2_10 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_10 — Language Documentation and Field Methods

Language documentation is the systematic recording, annotation, preservation, and dissemination of a language's spoken (and signed) forms — encompassing its phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and the f

language documentation field linguistics fieldwork descriptive linguistics elicitation transcription
ZG_2_04 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_04 — Oral-Formulaic Composition — Parry-Lord Theory

The oral-formulaic theory (also called the Parry-Lord theory) is one of the most influential discoveries in 20th-century humanities: the demonstration that great oral epics like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were not compose

oral tradition oral poetry Milman Parry Albert Lord oral-formulaic formula
ZG_2_07 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_07 — Dead Languages: Extinction, Documentation, and Revival

A dead language is one that no longer has any native speakers — no community transmits it to children as a first language through normal intergenerational communication. Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken today,

dead language extinct language language death language shift language revitalization dormant language
ZG_2_08 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_2_08 — Etymology and Historical Word Origins

Etymology is the study of the origin, history, and changing meanings of words — tracing the life of a word from its earliest attested form (or its reconstructed proto-form) through the centuries of sound change, semantic

etymology word origin historical linguistics semantic change borrowing loanword