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Latest comment: 12 years ago4 comments4 people in discussion
Han'er. As far as I can tell from that page, there are two distinct things called Han'er, one just a stage of Chinese influenced by Mongolian/Jurchen/Khitan that developed into some modern dialects (ergo doesn't belong), and one a purely written language with all sorts of Mongolian calquey features (which was never spoken ergo doesn't belong).
Sogdian. That page says "remnants evolved into Yaghnobi" -- what's "remnants" supposed to mean here, just that it fell from the status of a literary language? That doesn't make it extinct.
Sanskrit. Sanskrit is a formalized version of the language ancestral to modern Indic languages. Including it in a list of languages with "no spoken descendant" is analogous to including Classical Latin or Attic Greek in such a list. It's not clear to me that the term 'extinct' should exclude attested languages with very divergent living descendants, but if the introductory paragraph says so, the list should should conform.
But, there are a few thousand native speakers of Sanskrit (different from Latin or Classical Greek), so it isn't an extinct language. --Thogo04:52, 27 July 2012 (UTC)Reply