Re: Magdalenian words and compounds 2006/7
- From: Franz Gnaedinger <frgn@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 23:48:50 -0800 (PST)
Magdalenian words and compounds 2006/7
Part 30
RED RES, DER SER, EDR ESR, RDE RSE,
DRE SRE, ERD ERS --- holding a council in a camp
RED --- speaker; ancient Greek rhetor for speaker,
German Rede for speech, Redner for speaker
RES --- speech, topic of a speech, concern of a speaker;
ancient Greek rhaesis for to speak, talk, word, narration,
Latin res with many meanings that cover the topics which
may have been discussed at a council
DER --- baldric worn by a speaker at a council, made of
leather; ancient Greek derma for skin, fur, leather, hose
SER --- necklace of a supreme ruler or shaman, decorated
with perforated shells or teeths of deer; ancient Greek
seira for rope, chain
EDR --- seat in the tent or hut wherein a council was held,
logs covered with the best hides and furs a tribe could
provide; ancient Greek hedra for seat, chair
ESR --- elevated seat for a supreme ruler or an arch
shaman or shamaness; ancient Greek thronos for throne
RDE --- protector of a tent or hut wherein a council is
being held; ancient Greek rhytaer for protector
RSE --- protectors of a camp wherein a council is being
held; ancient Greek rhyesi-polis for protector of a town
DRE --- finding out what to do, coming to a conclusion,
issuing a resolution, making plans for taking action, to
plan an undertaking; ancient Greek drao for I do, act,
accomplish, dromenon for deed, undertaking, plan
SRE --- being decided about a resolution, a plan, an
undertaking; ancient Greek zoros for strong, powerful,
vigorous, nourishing
ERD --- to carry out a resolution, a plan, ancient Greek
erdo for I do, make, act (...)
ERS --- to carry out a resolution, a plan, an undertaking
in a fresh and decided manner; ancient Greek ersais for
fresh (...), arsaen for virile
DRE IDA --- plan (dre) happy (ida), a happy plan, a good
resolution; possible origin of druid
(end of part 30, to be continued)
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Magdalenian words and compounds 2006/7.
Part 29
KOD KOS, DOK SOK, OKD OKS, DKO SKO,
KDO KSO, ODK OSK --- a tent or hut
KOD --- tent or hut, poles stuck in the ground,
bound together at the top, covered with hides;
Sanskrit khada and kuti for hut, kota or kotta
for fortress, kotara for cave, Middle English
cod coth couth for hut, German Kate Kathe
for hut, Irish cod for head (casing of the mind),
codal for hide, skin, codlida for made of hides,
cota coat, raincoat (a mini-tent), Sanskrit coda
for jacket, Indo-European k(u)ot- and Hebrew
kot for spiky (consider the poles of a tent before
they are covered with hides), English head and
hat and hut may be further derivatives, consider
also French château for castle
KOS --- heavenly tent or vault; ancient Greek
kosmos for arrangement, way or style of
building, order, decorum, regularity, status (quo),
world, world order, space, cosmos, Earth,
humanity, everybody, ornament, praise, fame,
honor, Latin costa for rib (the ribs form the cage
of the lungs, of breath, identified with wind, spirit
and soul in Hebrew, ancient Greek and Latin),
English castle
DOK --- poles used for building a tent or hut
SOK --- strong; ancient Greek sokos for strong
OKD --- ground plan of a tent or hut, a polygon
defined by poles; ancient Greek okta for eight,
wherefrom octagon, perhaps a common ground
plan
OKS --- circumference and size of a tent or hut,
amount of materials used; ancient Greek ogkos
for mass, great number, weight, periphery (...)
pride
DKO --- walls and roof of a tent or hut; ancient
Greek teichos for wall, tegos for roof (see also
dai)
SKO --- surrounding area of a tent or hut;
ancient Greek saekos for enclosure, stable,
sacred area or district, sanctuary
KDO --- the large tent of a ruler or a shaman;
ancient Greek kydox for fame, being great,
honor, glory, pride, ornament, success, prosperity
KSO --- ornaments decorating such a tent or hut;
ancient Greek kissos for ivy, giving an idea of
how a decorated hut or tent may have looked like
ODK --- those inhabiting a large tent or hut;
hodaegos for the one showing the way, leader
(ruler), teacher (shaman)
OSK --- the art of building a large tent or hut;
ancient Greek askeo for I work upon carefully
and artistically, I produce, manifacture, decorate,
furnish, exercise, practice, endeavor
A drawing in the cave Cosquer near Marseilles,
27 000 BP, shows a rectangle in perspective
with triangles that may be seen as two rows of
tents, while another drawing in the same cave
may be the map of a camp near the confluence
of two rivers.
(end of part 29, to be continued)
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Magdalenian words and compounds 2006/7
Part 28
ChAR RACh, ChRA ARCh, RChA AChR --- fence
ChAR --- poles for making tents and huts and a fence
around a camp, some poles may have been decorated
with figurines carved in wood; ancient Greek charax
for pole, palisade, charis for grace, Charis one of the
graces
RACh --- intertwined thorn branches used for a fence,
filling the spaces between the poles; ancient Greek
rachos for thorn shrub, hedge
ChRA --- to ward off (purpose of a fence); ancient
Greek arkeo for I ward off, help, am strong enough
RChA --- small openings in the fence where people
could pass, closed by 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 (while
ac for an expanse of land with water was the land
around a camp)
(end of part 28, to be continued)
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Magdalenian words and compounds 2006/7
Part 27
TOM MOT, OTM MTO, OMT TMO --- to work on hides
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, English motion
OTM --- hide, so named for the specific smell of
leather and fur; ancient Greek odmae for smell
(see also odm)
MTO --- to knead wet hides in order to make them
soft; ancient Greek matto masso for I kneed,
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
(end of part 27, to be continued)- Hide quoted text -
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