Re: what is etymology? (linguistics and biology)
- From: "Franz Gnaedinger" <frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 13 Apr 2006 06:39:18 -0700
PAD and literal associations
PAD --- foot, acitivity of the feet, to go, pad along ...
D-forms are comparated in S-forms:
pad PAS --- everywhere (in a plain), here, south and
north of me, east and west of me / to move like water
does, in every direction, overcoming every obstacle
in the way like water does
pad VAD --- water, to wade (a word from last year)
pad vad VAS --- German Wasser for water
VAD may be shallow water one can wade across,
while the comparative form VAS may be deep water.
pad pas PAT --- Latin pater for Father, German Vater
pad pas FAS --- Latin fas for divine order, divine law,
fate
pad pas fas FAT --- Latin fatum for fate
pad BAS --- ancient Greek basileus for king, arch king
PAS LEI --- the lion who gets everywhere and atttacks
where he comes to; may perhaps be the origin of Greek
basileus for the king of kings, for the supreme ruler as
warrior
pad PAS PAN --- ancient Greek for all, every
PAS IMA --- everywhere love, possible origin of the
female given name Fatima. Or is it FAT IMA, she who
loves her fate?
Regards Franz Gnaedinger www.seshat.ch
ARC CRA, CAR RAC, RCA ACR / TYR RYT
ARC --- cave bear Ursus spelaeus, a formidable beast,
by thirty per cent longer than a brown bear, towering
when raising on the hind legs, probably the ultimate
challenge for an early hunter, extinct since 10,000
years; ancient Greek arktos Latin ursus for bear
CRA --- strength, power and skills needed to hunt
a cave bear, rewarded by a successful hunt, and by
the privilege of raising a cranium (bowl made from the
skull of an animal) filled with bear blood in order to
sacrifice the soul of the bear and thus establish a link
with the beyond, imploring strength, power and skills
from above; ancient Greek krateo for I am strong,
powerful, I overcome (...), German Kraft for strength,
English craft for skill, Greek kratear English crater;
the Ainu of Hokkaido believe that the soul of a ritually
sacrificed bear establishes a link with the beyond
CAR --- head of a bear, deposited at a cult place,
for example in a cave; ancient Greek kar for head;
bear heads had been deposited in several caves, one
in the Chauvet cave (paintings therein from between
32 000 and 30 000 BP, a falling rock had blocked the
entrance to the cave some 26 000 years ago)
RAC --- fur of a bear; ancient Greek rhagos for rug,
carpet, cover, English rug
RCA --- ritual sacrifice of the soul of a bear, raising
a cranium filled with bear blood, depositing a bear head
in a cave or on top of a stone pile; ancient Greek rhezo
for I sacrifice
ACR --- supreme sacrifice; ancient Greek akros for top,
akrothonion for depositing a donation on top
TYR --- he who overcomes; turned into ancient Greek
turannos for king, ruler by force, tyrant, also Norse tyr
for the god of the law and of war (Gregory E. Areshian)
(Following Greek I give Y u, not Y y)
Inverse RYT --- to throw a spear or lance; ancient Greek
rhutor for archer, protector
!L (clicking L) --- lion man, consider the famous figurine
of a man with a lion head from the Vogelherd cave,
became Magdalenian !LOG (clicking L) for the one who
has the say; ancient Greek leo and lis for lion, Latin leo,
Italian leone, French lion, German Loewe, ancient Greek
logos for word, reasoning
ARC TYR --- he who overcomes a bear; turned into
Arthur Artus, while the cave bear turned into a dragon,
overcome by Arthur in a terrible fight which lasted for three
days and nights - cave bears were long extinct in the time
of Geoffrey of Monbouth, and bones of cave bears found
in caves had been misinterpreted as remains of dragons
CRA !L (clicking L) --- cranium filled with bear blood,
raised by the lion man in order to establish a link with
the beyond, imploring strength, power and skills from
above; became Arthur's Grail in the pagan version of
the ancient legends, from which Goeffrey of Monbouth
and his followers must have drawn
TOM MOT, OTM MTO, OMT TMO --- hides
ChAR RACh, ChRA ARCh, ARCh ChRA --- fence
TOM - stone knive; ancient Greek tomae for cut
MOT --- to cut and clean a hide with a stone knive;
Latin moto for I move back and forth
OTM --- hide, so named for the special smell of fur
and leather; ancient Greek odmae osmae for odor
and fragrance (c.f. ODM OSM)
MTO --- to knead wet hides in order to make the
leather soft; ancient Greek matto masso for I knead,
English massage
OMT --- hides as raw material for making clothes,
belts, baldrics, covers, tent walls, and so on; ancient
Greek omos for raw, crude, fresh (...), omotaes for
roughness
TMO --- treasurer of hides; ancient Greek tamaias
for treasurer
ChAR --- poles for making tents or hut, also for the
fence around a camp, fence poles may have been
decorated with figurines carved in wood, as elegant
as the figurines carved in ivory and stone, although
long lost; ancient Greek charax for pole, palisade,
charis for grace, Charis one of the Graces (a figurine
carved from the top of a fence pole, then)
RACh --- intertwined thorn branches between the
fence poles, warding off and holding away animals;
ancient Greek rachos for thorn shrub, hedge
ChRA --- to ward off (purpose of the fence); ancient
Greek chraismeo for I ward off, hold off (...)
ARCh --- being strong enough to ward off animals;
ancient Greek arkeo for I ward off, help, I am strong
enough (...)
RChA --- small openings in the fence, where people
could pass, but no bigger animals, closed during night;
ancient Greek rox rogos for opening, crack, crevice,
fissure
AChR --- area inside the fence, area of the camp;
ancient Greek agros for field, land, estate, mansion
AChR for the area of a camp must be discerned from
AC for an expanse of land with water: AC would be
the area around a camp, AChR the area of the camp
itself, within the boundaries of the fence.
.
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