Re: why god spells backward of dog?
- From: "Dusan Vukotic" <dusan.vukotic@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 5 Nov 2006 10:01:29 -0800
dabbog@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
No,i m farest from muslim.i m a chinese.in chinese,God(sheng),its
origin derived from lightning.God and saint used in conjection means
sanctity.
i dislike dog.i like wildness.freedom,its widest sense,is the essential
of God and any creator of pride.while dog servant to its feeder.no
matter its ability to defense or smell.
Franz Gnaedinger wrote:
dabbog@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
In no way can dog be associated with god in my view.god,in his
eccentail would be freedom,be independent,while dog can only be
directed by the feeder.
i think its shameful to let god being backward spelt from dog.
thx all replies.
Please get the difference between god and God. A god is a pagan
god, while God is the God you believe in. And it is a fact that dogs
were considered deities in the past, Anubis in Egypt, for one.
The Celts believed dogs got magic abilities. The Iranian followers
of Zarathustra believe that dogs can tell whether a seemingly
deceased person has really died, or whether the soul lingers on.
Pluto, brother of Zeus and Poseidon, was accompanied by the
dog Cerberus. And so on. I don't say god is backward spelt from
god, I just say that both words go back to an Azilian permutation
group of six words around the meme (idea) of "good" in many
meanings of the word. DhAG means able, inverse GADh means
good in our modern sense. Dog comes from DhAG meaning
able, it is not a name but an epithet meaning able. God comes
from GADh meaning good, as Proto-Indo-European *kadh-
'to guard, care for'. Jesus was the good shepard, he cared
for people. Are you perhaps muslim? I hope also Allah cares
and finally brings the muslims to reason: instead of fighting
each other they should help each other and free their woman
and plant trees for a begin, as the Jews are doing. Women
are still being treated as bad as dogs in some countries,
if not much worse.
Please, do not apologize for not being a Moslem, not your fault.
Whether you like dogs or not is irrelevant. However, if you enjoy
"wildness and freedom" you should consider joining The FWDSA (Free Wild
Dingo Society of Australia).
Dingo is a wild dog from the family Canidae (wolflike wild dog of the
family Canidae). Here we must pay more attention to the N. Latin
Canidae (dogs, wolves, jackals, foxes; Canis, genus Canis) although we
know that this word is most closely related to 'canina'. Serbian
language has the verb 'goniti' (drive, pursue, persecute) which is
phonologically almost the same as ‘canidae’. On the other side
there is the Serbian word ‘gonjenje’ (driving, chasing, pursuing)
very similar to ‘canina’. Now, let us see what the Greek word
κινητός (movable, mobile) and κίνηση (movement, motion)
has to do with the Serbian ‘goniti’ (gonjenje) and the N. Latin
‘canidae’. We could have added to this the Greek κυνικός
(cynical) and the other words Franz and I had mentioned earlier. O
course, there are hundreds of other similar “DO-GON” words and the
‘dog’ problem demands a very long explanation.
Is there anything we could do with the Italian dialectical ‘doge’
(from Latin ‘dux’); the elected chief magistrate of the former
republics of Venice and Genoa. Apparently, Italian ‘doge’ is not
directly related to the English ‘dog’; neither is the Greek
δοκιμασία (trial, ordeal) which is a cognate with the Serbian
‘dokazi-ma’ (evidences); from δοκειν, δοξα (opinion),
διακονος (servant, student in church, deacon); hence the
Serbian ’đak’ (pupil).
If you are able to understand that διακονος, deacon and Serbian
’đak’ were derived from the same reduplicated GON syllable (Lat.
cogno-, Serb. znanje /knowledge/, ’mozak’ /brain; not Brian’s
Brain Down) you are ready to enter the whole new horizon of the
miraculous game called human speech. Even the German ‘denken’ and
the English ‘think’ are distantly related to the word ‘dog’,
just as it is case with the Serbian words ‘douka’ (teaching) and
‘dokon’ (to have leisure; from ‘dokončati’ to terminate, to
make an end).
To be more precise, I would add that all the above words sprang from
the secondary ur-basis DO-GON (OD-GON) whose meaning was “driving
in” and “driving out”. In fact, the father of these words was the
primeval GON syllable.
DV
.
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