释义 |
Ugro-|ˈuːgrəʊ, ˈjuːg-| combining form of Ugrian a., used in a few terms, as Ugro-Altaic, Ugro-Finn, Ugro-Finnic, Ugro-Finnish, Ugro-Samoyede, Ugro-Slavonic, Ugro-Tartarian.
1848J. C. Prichard in Rep. Brit. Assoc. 1847 241 The Turanian, or as I shall term them, Ugro-Tartarian languages, or the languages of High-Asia and other regions{ddd}Ugro-Tartarian nations. 1852Todd's Cycl. Anat. IV. ii. 1347 The Turanian, or Ugro-Tartarian [languages]..; spoken by the (Mongolian) people of High Asia and of certain parts of Northern Europe. 1862Temple Bar Nov. 549 The Ugro-Finns, whom they have driven northwards. 1879Encycl. Brit. IX. 210/1 The term Finns..being, with its adjective Finnic or Finno-Ugric or Ugro-Finnic, the collective name of the westernmost branch of the great Uralo-Altaic family. 1880A. H. Sayce Introd. Sci. of Lang. II. viii. 190 It is more than doubtful whether we can class the Mongols physically with the Turkish-Tartars or the Ugro-Finns. 1883Morfill Slavonic Lit. ii. 31 In 681 the Slavonic settlers fell under the power of a tribe of Bulgarians, a Ugro-Finnish race. 1886M. A. Morrison in Jrnl. R. Asiatic Soc. XVIII. ii. 177 Broadly speaking,..the Ugro-Altaic languages are spoken over a region extending through more than 100 degrees of longitude. 1887Encycl. Brit. XXII. 11/2 The Yeniseians were followed by the Ugro-Samoyedes. 1896Keane Ethnology ix. 201 [The] Bulgarians [are] Ugro-Slavonic. |