Re: "par coeur" origin
- From: "Franz Gnaedinger" <frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 20 Apr 2006 00:19:04 -0700
Christopher Culver wrote:
The Proto-Indo-European root was *k'erd (cf. Old Church Slavonic
"srdIce"), not "cor". Gr korae ("girls", not "girl" was you claim)
isn't from this root, because -or- doesn't reflect PIE syllabic -r- in
Greek.
You claim that your made-up Magdalenian language was spoken before
PIE, so why are you drawing your three-letter groups only from later
languages?
Killrated, all of it, incidentally.
Christopher Culver
*** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com ***
Hae korae, ho koros, each form a singular; 'ae' being my ascii
version of Greek aetha: alpha beta gamma delta epsilon zaetha
aetha ... As for
CRO --- to beat, knock, a young heart beating,
a quick pulse; ancient Greek krouo for I beat, push,
knock, krouros for source
I might add Latin cruo for blood.
My claim is that our languages, or rather the some
eight languages I learned, keep a holographic memory
of the early language(s). A hologram is real, you can see
it, yet also unreal, you can't touch it. Many words are lost,
have no "body" in language anymore, but they left some
traces in the holographic word space. Using my method
of pondering permutation groups and clusters of lateral
associations, especially the D-forms which are comparated
in S-forms, I can do with traces left in ancient Greek, also
in Latin, in my own medieval dialect, and occasionally in
some other languages. From time to time I look up Pokorny,
or Sanskrit, or proceedings of Indo-European conferences,
etc., where I always find confirmation, often unexpected:
I gave VAD for water, yesterday I found Hittite _wa-tar_ for
water. I gave PIR for fire, ancient Greek pyr, yesterday
I found Tocharian A _por_ for fire. Just using the languages
I learned leaves the other languages for testing my words.
As for killrating: I wondered why ancient Greek hae phonae
(with omega) for sound, voice, and ho phonos, hae phonae
(with omikron) for murder are that close, so I had a go at
PhON, and found that the six permutations revolve around
the meme of snow and hunting in winter. More tomorrow in
my killrated etymological thread. This morning I wondered
about the inverse of NOPh, which stands for a snow storm.
Reminds me of November, when usually the first snow falls
in Switzerland. If this should be more than a coincidence,
then there must have been an ancient calendar where the
ninth period of time coincided with about our November.
And there is a wonderful calendar, which I shall also present
in my killrated etymological thread, in two days, or perhaps
already tomorrow.
My work is leading ever further. I don't push it. The insights
are just showing up - the new calendar, which I date to the
late Magdalenium, required only two hours' work, this very
morning, before I stood up, in bed, a real pleasure.
Why should I stop my work when it leads further?
Franz Gnaedinger
.
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