One good instance is the way many languages of South-East Asia, including Thai and Vietnamese, have taken on the appearance of neighbouring languages like Chinese, with monosyllabic words and distinctive tones. Yet Thai and Vietnamese are no longer believed to be related to the Sino-Tibetan[?] family.
In Europe, Albanian, Romanian, and Bulgarian are all Indo-European but from very different branches. Yet they share the grammatical feature of a postposed definite article[?]. This does not occur in languages closely related to Romanian or to Bulgarian.
Many linguists think the Mongolian, Turkic, and Manchu-Tungus[?] families of northern Asia are genetically related, in a group they call Altaic, but the evidence is equivocal, and their common features such as vowel harmony might instead mean they are part of a Sprachbund.
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