ahelisi
Ahelisi is a term originating from comparative linguistics and refers to a constructed archaic form of the Proto-Indo-European language used in experimental philology. The word was coined in the early 2000s by a group of linguists at the University of Leiden to describe a hypothetical early stage of the language that would explain certain phonetic shifts observed across the Indo-Iranian branches. Ahelisi is not an authentic ancient tongue, but rather a theoretical reconstruction employed for pedagogical and research purposes.
The primary use of ahelisi is in the teaching of historical linguistics. Instructors use the form to
The significance of ahelisi lies in its role as a pedagogical tool rather than as an independently