Re: Fr/lat/ru tu-vous/tu-vos/ - : etymology ?



"Franz Gnaedinger" <frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1191296535.704256.217460@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Oct 2, 3:56 am, Bart Mathias <math...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
benli...@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
[...]
Just out of curiosity, I've been wondering: Does anyone know of any
_real_ language in which "left eye" and "right eye" have completely
separate lexical items?

I don't think so. Probably a matter of entropy.

Nowadays even languages that differentiate between "right hand" and
"left hand" are in the minority (Japanese "hikide" and "yunde" are
obsolete, and even they were compounds), even though handedness is
usually considered much more importantant that eyedness.

Simply having those words is magnificent proof of the antiquity of
Magdelenian.

Gives me an idea for a new bumpersticker.

I missed the question by Ross Clark. I don't know of
any language that has different words for the right eye
and the left eye, which makes my Magdalenian claim
non-trivial: there were different words for the right and
left eye, right and left arm, right and left hand, right
and left leg, right and left foot. Much to my surprise
I learned from the Proceedings of the Seventeeth (?)
Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference that in IE
the left and right side of the horse had different
names! (I shall look up that volume next week
whan I return home). Why using different words?
It makes sense for hunters. Instead of saying:

there, look to the right hand side!
attention, look to the left hand side!

Last year I went hunting goats and deer. I remember my
hunting body whispering from behind me orders like these:
Left!
Right!
Two at one! (i.e. Two goats at one o'clock)

If he started to woffle something like "attention, look to
the left hand side!" with all those unnecessary words, like
"attention", "to", "the", "hand", "side", I'd think he has
completely lost his mind.

pjk


you simply say OC or AY ... The words are
different enough so you won't mistake one
for the other. Seems that we can make a test
case of OC and AY. So you have a chance
to end my silly experiment, and I have
a chance to raise interest in Magdalenian.


.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Fr/lat/ru tu-vous/tu-vos/ - : etymology ?
    ... Nowadays even languages that differentiate between "right hand" and ... any language that has different words for the right eye ... which makes my Magdalenian claim ... a chance to raise interest in Magdalenian. ...
    (sci.lang)
  • Re: Bush baby in Atlanta visits HRO
    ... Cluttered with merchandise that is not marked it was difficult to see ... Much like the circumstance here where the HRO is smaller with an absence ... lots of trinkets to catch your eye and deplete your budget resources. ... in the US is now in two languages!!! ...
    (rec.radio.shortwave)
  • Re: Fr/lat/ru tu-vous/tu-vos/ - : etymology ?
    ... Magdalenians to have separate words for the right and left eye, ... The modern IE languages have been around way longer than instruments have. ... in German _die Rechte_ can mean the right ... Complexity has nothing to do with why English is a lingua franca and German isn't. ...
    (sci.lang)
  • Re: How to boost Eiffel?
    ... i don't see a way that any other technology will beat J2EE ... Eiffel will have a chance ... Ruby never had one but Rails boosted the languages success. ... I know that the Ocaml C implementation is unuseable for large ...
    (comp.lang.eiffel)
  • Re: The theory of Mr. Carrasquer
    ... >> The chance of a double coincidence is even less than that. ... > And we are not talking about the number of languages here, ... > but about the number of features in a unspecified number of ...
    (sci.lang)