Csaba Varga - The Nostratic Language - 13 Our Words From the Past

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 HOME CONTENTS CONTACT < Our Words from the Past  An etymological comparison of word-samples out of 13 different languages. https://www.createspace.com/3482003  And the whole earth w as of one language and of one speech” (Genesis I.11.1) here and when did this one language develop? hat kind of language was it? Is it still around? Supposedly we found it whats the proof of it being the mother of all languages? e will find the answers for all these questions by reading this book and following the author’s sharp logic. 1. Introduction The first part of this book contains introductory and informatory messages. The second part offers etymological comparisons of wor d-clusters taken from twelve (+1) different languages with their Hungarian counterparts. The third part contains the theoretical foundation and conclusion. The twelve languages are: English, German, Russian, Ancient-Greek, Etruscan, Latin, Hebrew, Sumerian, Tamil, Mongolian, Bask, Quechua / Aymara. The words being brought to comparison are practically identical with the Hungarian equivalents. The most important criterion by the collection of the word-clusters was the easy verifiability. I used one dicti onary per language (exception Hebrew), which are available in the book-stores, in the libraries, on the I nternet or standing on the bookshelves everywhere. The biggest help for this work was the Etymological Dictionary of the Hungarian Languageby Czu czor-Fogarasi, published by the Hungarian Scientific Academy 1862.* *The dictionary by Czuczor- Fogarasi is a marvellous memorial of the Hungarian language. Without knowing its etymological principles, nobody can say that he understands the words in all details. The two authors performance in linguistics can only be measured by that of Einstein and Newton in Physics. It differs only by the amount of publicity. The “A magyar nyelv szótára” (The dictionary of the Hunngarian language) is available per Internet from Arcaneum adatbázis.  2. The final conclusion Should we find t hat all word-heaps  collected from several different languages and containing mostly different words  independently correspond with different areas of a certain selected language, then we can rightly conclude that this selected language has been the root or the starting-base of all languages of which the word-samp les were taken from.  We should call this discovery one of the most important theses of Historical Linguistics. This acts like a wrench, there is no way out. Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Page 1 / 2

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