Re: copper and venus
- From: Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2005 17:22:15 -0500
Kid D wrote:
My "Oxford History of Chemistry" by William Brock asserts that copper was associated with the worship of Venus. (Association of colors?) Venus, the goddess, was associated with the appearance of the planet, Venus, in the night sky. "The History of Religious Ideas" by Mircea Eliade states that the Sumerian equivalent for Venus was named Inanna. The Akkadian name was Asharte. The Egyptian name was Isis. The Greek name was Aphrodite. The Saxon was Friff and the French was Vendredi.
<spit!!!> The French name for Venus was *Vendredi*? Uh, no. The Romans used weeks of seven days named after the seven "planetary" bodies. "Venus' day" was "veneris dies" which in French became "vendredi", also known as *Friday*.
(Does anyone who knows foreign languages have anything of interest to add regarding the names of the "goddess / planet"?)
I'm not sure that there has been anything of interest thus far to add *to*. Most of your message has nothing to do with language. Then you passed on from Brock an arbitrary list of names a few random peoples had for the planet we call Venus. Two of those names were wrong--besides the "vendredi" thing, it's "Frigg", not "Friff", though maybe that was just a typo on your part. If you meant to be leading up to something linguistically interesting, I'm afraid I'm not seeing it.
.
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