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Wimbledon 2000 Semi-final – Agassi vs. Rafter (2003) Starring: Andre Agassi, Patrick Rafter; Standing Room Only, DVD Release Date: August 16, 2005, Run Time: 213 minutes, . |
Charlie Rose with Andre Agassi (May 7, 2001) Charlie Rose, Inc., DVD Release Date: August 15, 2006, Run Time: 57 minutes. |
Wimbledon: The Record Breakers (2005) Starring: Andre Agassi, Boris Becker; Standing Room Only, DVD Release Date: August 16, 2005, Run Time: 52 minutes, . |
Video games |
Andre Agassi Tennis for the SNES, Sega Genesis, Sega Game Gear, Master System, and Mobile phone |
Agassi Tennis Generation for PS2 and GBA |
Agassi Tennis Generation 2002 for Windows |
Smash Court Pro Tournament for PS2 |
Top Spin 4 (On cover of game) for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii |
See also |
Agassi–Sampras rivalry |
All-time tennis records – men's singles |
List of Grand Slam Men's Singles champions |
Tennis male players statistics |
Tennis records of the Open Era – men's singles |
Explanatory notes |
References |
Further reading |
External links |
Andre Agassi Ventures |
Farewell to Tennis Speech at the U.S. Open |
Agassi's Tennis Hall of Fame Induction for Steffi Graf |
1970 births |
Living people |
20th-century American businesspeople |
21st-century American businesspeople |
American autobiographers |
American investors |
American male tennis players |
American people of Iranian descent |
American people of Iranian-Assyrian descent |
American sportspeople of Armenian descent |
American real estate businesspeople |
American sportspeople in doping cases |
Armenian-American tennis players |
Assyrian sportspeople |
Australian Open (tennis) champions |
Doping cases in tennis |
Ethnic Armenian sportspeople |
French Open champions |
Grand Slam (tennis) champions in men's singles |
International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees |
Iranian Assyrian people |
Iranian people of Armenian descent |
Medalists at the 1996 Summer Olympics |
Nevada Democrats |
Novak Djokovic coaches |
Olympic gold medalists for the United States in tennis |
Philanthropists from Nevada |
Sportspeople from Las Vegas |
Sportspeople of Iranian descent |
Steffi Graf |
Tennis people from Nevada |
Tennis players at the 1996 Summer Olympics |
US Open (tennis) champions |
Wimbledon champions |
World No. 1 tennis players |
Writers from Las Vegas The Austroasiatic languages , also known as Mon–Khmer , are a large language family in Mainland Southeast Asia and South Asia. These languages are scattered throughout parts of Thailand, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, and southern China. There are around 117 million speakers of Austroasiatic language... |
Ethnologue identifies 168 Austroasiatic languages. These form thirteen established families (plus perhaps Shompen, which is poorly attested, as a fourteenth), which have traditionally been grouped into two, as Mon–Khmer, and Munda. However, one recent classification posits three groups (Munda, Nuclear Mon-Khmer, and Kh... |
Austroasiatic languages have a disjunct distribution across Southeast Asia and parts of India, Bangladesh, Nepal and East Asia, separated by regions where other languages are spoken. They appear to be the extant original languages of Mainland Southeast Asia (excluding the Andaman Islands), with the neighboring, and som... |
Etymology |
The name Austroasiatic comes from a combination of the Latin words for "South" and "Asia", hence "South Asia". |
Typology |
Regarding word structure, Austroasiatic languages are well known for having an iambic "sesquisyllabic" pattern, with basic nouns and verbs consisting of an initial, unstressed, reduced minor syllable followed by a stressed, full syllable. This reduction of presyllables has led to a variety among modern languages of pho... |
The Austroasiatic languages are further characterized as having unusually large vowel inventories and employing some sort of register contrast, either between modal (normal) voice and breathy (lax) voice or between modal voice and creaky voice. Languages in the Pearic branch and some in the Vietic branch can have a thr... |
However, some Austroasiatic languages have lost the register contrast by evolving more diphthongs or in a few cases, such as Vietnamese, tonogenesis. Vietnamese has been so heavily influenced by Chinese that its original Austroasiatic phonological quality is obscured and now resembles that of South Chinese languages, w... |
Proto-language |
Much work has been done on the reconstruction of Proto-Mon–Khmer in Harry L. Shorto's Mon–Khmer Comparative Dictionary. Little work has been done on the Munda languages, which are not well documented. With their demotion from a primary branch, Proto-Mon–Khmer becomes synonymous with Proto-Austroasiatic. Paul Sidwell (2... |
This is identical to earlier reconstructions except for . is better preserved in the Katuic languages, which Sidwell has specialized in. |
Internal classification |
Linguists traditionally recognize two primary divisions of Austroasiatic: the Mon–Khmer languages of Southeast Asia, Northeast India and the Nicobar Islands, and the Munda languages of East and Central India and parts of Bangladesh, parts of Nepal. However, no evidence for this classification has ever been published. |
Each of the families that is written in boldface type below is accepted as a valid clade. By contrast, the relationships between these families within Austroasiatic are debated. In addition to the traditional classification, two recent proposals are given, neither of which accepts traditional "Mon–Khmer" as a valid uni... |
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