Showing posts sorted by date for query sanskrit origin. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query sanskrit origin. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Friday, October 4, 2024

October 4th

1:06 AM I did not know Sputnik means spouse or fellow traveler in Russian but i bet is not used in every day Russian in this way. It is most likely an artificial linguistic construction that nowadays is synonym with satellite. I did not know it had as root the word put which in Russian means path. Sanskrit pathika पथिक, the millennia old Indo-European connection.

With all these said i have to add it is almost an anagram of Putin. And nowadays it is used to name one of their main mews agencies and radio station.

On the other hand, in English we have the very common word spite, which means... The other word that sounds similarly in English is spit, with past tense spat.

I doubt those who choose it did not know the meaning in English. But not the regular Russians who never knew this until now... A very unhappy choice at least which means subconsciously antagonizing the Russians again and again and again... One more reason for the decades long cold war.

Another unhappy linguistic construction that i come across every day (through the license plates i see) is KGB, which in English pronounces cage be. GRU - gross, FSB - frostbite, etc..

1:50 Talking about linguistics. The origin of name Gaga. One of the reasons i don't go to see doctors anymore. And who is behind her.

2:30 More semantics? Iron dome or Iran doom?

8:18 Seen on MSN (Microsoft Network) as a paid ad. I saw many ads in my life but nothing like this. Who's paying for this? What's next? Alien sex?

10:10 Are those lotus motifs? Is that a swastika?

Monday, January 29, 2024

Occult Domination by Asians of the United States

They woke me up with sporadic noises however now a heavy person or one who hops at every step makes the hole building shake. Is either when i read the news, do a search etc.. One can hear the stomps at the beginning and end of this file.

However i managed to find something. It is not only my perception that there is a link between Shintoism and Hinduism.

There is a quote in the first page of the article above that tries to prove the Japanese text is almost entirely taken from Dà zhìdù lùn.

But my ideas came from somewhere else. The correspondence between Hindu gods and Japanese ones, like in the case of Daikokuten. Even the name Shinto seem to come from Hindu.

Wondering if the feminine power principle Shakti has something to do with the goddess Amaterasu, highest position in Shinto pantheon. Though Shinto tradition in Japan says Amaterasu legend is much older than middle ages.

The largest volcano by volume in the Cascade range, located in northern California is named Mt. Shasta. The name California itself and a myriad of other toponyms in the western United States remind of the name of goddess Kali, which today is marginal in Hindu religion. The name Nevada seems to come from Sanskrit.

Here is one more disturbing link. The name of the Capital of the United States (and the state of Washington, geographically closest to Japan) seem to come from Japanese Wa Shinto which in Japanese means Shinto Harmony. 

The Capitol Building and Jefferson Memorial are built in a version in the shape of a Shiva Linga. Both domes have three bands reminding of Tripundra. However at the end of the alley that starts from the Capitol building there is a sort of Obelisk that reminds of Egyptian pyramids. But if you asked me, i'd say the whole valley of California, with Mt. Shasta at one end represent a Shiva linga.

George Washington himself who oddly looks like the face of the Sphinx is depicted on a fresco on the highest point of the dome of Capitol building as a godworshiped nowadays by a Shinto Sect in Hawaii.

No wonder someone organized live shows in the town of Palisade, Nevada, that was at the origin of the wild wild west myth, to prevent European descending folks from the East to come over in large numbers in the west, especially after finishing of the trans continental railway.

It is my perception that the west nowadays is dominated by people from Asia, mainly Japanese in the State of Washington, Indians in California, etc., some masquerading as Latinos. Microsoft and Google headquartered in Seattle, Wahington and California is dominated by Indians. The mayor of San Francisco by example looks Japanese.

I myself have been "processed" in Vancouver, Washington (just north of Portland) in what seems to be a sacrificial ritual. (double quadruple confusion, Vancouver WA, US vs Vancouver BC, Canada, and Washington State vs Washington DC)

But nowadays i have neighbors that keep suppressing me using all kinda of illegal means, including remote psychological and  physical torture with synchronized noise, dust and dog waste. The use of women in these actions seemed justified since they are not as sensitive to dog waste and also match the chaotic feminine destructive part of Shiva.

US music charts and radio stations playlists are dominated by Japanese women masquerading as Blacks and Latinas etc.

However white politicians and entertainers are figured by Hungarians who came in Europe from Asia in waves, last one from Nepal in 9th century.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

January 3rd

10:45 There is no article in Latin or Sanskrit. Where the article came in European languages? My suspicion is at least for romance languages it came from Arabic via Spanish during the Arabic occupation of Iberic peninsula. But Arabic didn't have one too during the time Latin language was spoken.

Anyways, it never made it to Romanian, which has double Sanskrit and Latin origin. Smart a... linguistic engineers added it sometime before it is found in any written text i can find right now, but... at the end of  the words. I think because it is a pain, and nobody pronounces it.

For feminine common nouns that ended in a anyways nothing was added, meaning those nouns are articulated already. However for masculine that in Romanian were ending prior to that in u they added this horrible l at the end that nobody pronounces it, it exists only in writing. It is very similar with suffix l in Hungarian which i'm not sure what is used for (Hungarian, one if not the most complex language i heard of, with 52 different suffixes).

However since that was not enough, sometime around year 1900 they added an extra u after the l, probably hoping people will learn to pronounce at least the l, but that never worked.

I believe that was the moment when Dracu, most likely derived from Slavic Drag conflicting so badly with old Norse, English and German drag and with late fabrication drag became first Dracul and then Draculu, and in the end Stocker modified to Dracula, to add a gay (another late 20th century added meaning of a benign benevolent, happy English word) dimension to it, making it sound like the Italian word fanciula (which i also suspect being a late make up because is too close to...). Also to rime with Neckola. And other words.

12:35 Another association showing in media factory at the right time. Epstein, Einstein.

7:55 Einstein, Hawking, Michael Jackson and Bill Clinton should not be afraid. But it all depends where they say it happened. Certain states do not have time limitation for complaints on such crimes. Though i doubt they were doing the alleged orgies with kids in Alaska, Delaware or Colorado etc.. Florida, possible.

But it all looks to me like these dramatically different laws from state to state are discriminatory under one US Constitution. I mean, you can go in Iowa and do all the orgies you want and four years later you are all clear of any possibility of indictment.

8:25 Uzina de știri.

În afară de simbolismul prezent în acest eveniment, începând cu numele Daci și terminând cu forma de piramidă de paie.

Era imposibil ca focul să fi pornit simultan în toate colibele acelea. Cred că a fost vorba de minute diferență de la prima la ultima. Era imposibil ca măcar unul sau doi să nu fi urlat în timp ce ardea, trezindu-i pe ceilalți. Era nevoie doar de câteva secunde să ieși afară. Stau și mă gândesc că jumătate din cei prezenți trebuiau să fi scăpat, statistic vorbind.

Fumul te poate face inconștient dar dacă nu ești chiar mort, flăcările te vor trezi măcar pentru câteva secunde ca să urli o dată.

Stau și mă gândesc câte asemenea improvizații există acum pe teritoriul României. Însă și ei ca Bill Clinton nu tremură fiindcă știu că sunt prea multe și nu le poate nimeni închide pe toate, iar acel nimeni nici nu vrea să le închidă fiindcă preferă să mențină acest haos în România.

Însă și într-o colibă de paie un detector de fum cu baterie, izolat, fără rețea, fără nici o legătură cu nimic te poate trezi din morți sau din leșin cu un zgomot de peste 100 dB. Aviz turiștilor. Puteți să vă luați unul în bagaje, ar trebui să fie vreo 25 de euro pe Amazon, însă alegeți unul fotoelectric, celelalte au o mică problemă.

Într-un timp se întâmpla cam un incendiu pe lună într-un spital, unde probabil măcar o persoană era trează, am impresia că seria s-a oprit după această postare a mea.

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

May 31

1:10 I had started in my mind a little project trying to compare the differences in military power between Celts and Dacians, starting with the Boudica revolt and ran into a page about Druids. Was getting bored and about to close that page when i saw this and then made a link with this which got me excited again.

1:38 Here it goes. The final battle of the Boudican revolt. 10 000 well equipped, trained Roman soldiers which in numbers are the equivalent of two legions, against 230 000 furious, poorly equipped and disorganized Briton civilians. Tacitus said... The battle saved the province for Romans, at a time Nero was considering retreat from Britain and Romans stayed there for aprox. 350 more years.

1:41 Now try to imagine the military power of Dacians. In the second Dacian war, Trajan built another over one km or almost a mile long stone bridge over Danube and crossed with over 150 000 soldiers or 30 legions and defeated the Dacians. It was worth it cause that brought Rome 200 tons of gold a year from Dacian mines for the next 170 years. But it wasn't only gold. 500 000 Dacians fell prisoners and were turned into slaves. Usually where there's gold there's also silver etc...

2:20 For those who still wonder about the origin of Romanian people and language...

2:28 There is little doubt that, like other times when supposedly nobody was upstairs, or in between occupancies, someone actually is, this time hidden behind those appliances. Some faint steps earlier changed my mood and a single shy squeak more recently made me accidentally delete the phrase above. Good thing i wanted to see something else and could not find the link and the phrase.

2:45 Iaziges, probably at the origin of (the name) of modern city of Iași...

3:02 Possible origin of the toponym Transylvania, different from the official theory...

3:20 First evidence of Christianity. Gothia... Gothia...

3:27 I didn't know! Dacicus Maximus, reconquest?


8:54 Ce fel de știre e asta? Un tip cu dizabilități care îndeamnă pe alții să meargă la facultate. Cuvinte cheie: Romi, inginer, medic. În fundal o stradă asemănătoare cu cea de pe coperta Beatles, cu Abbey Road (Strada Mănăstirii sau Abației). O compunere menită să vă ia și să vă macine ideile înfiripate recent de mine.

9:00 Apropo, Am avut o scădere dramatică a glicemiei după un tratament mai lung cu antibiotice administrate pe piele (tablete lipite cu plasture, bandaj peste pentru puțină presiune), pentru o infecție la un braț. Încep să cred din ce în ce mai mult că diabetul este de fapt o infecție cronică a pancreasului.

Infecția trece destul de ușor, cu antibiotice administrate intramuscular sau intravenos sau pe piele (patches), nu oral fiindcă îl irită mai tare, glicemia nu scade însă complet și imediat din cauza acumulărilor din țesuturi și micșorarea capacității pancreasului în timpul infecției (probabil cicatrizare).

Sursa infectării pancreasului este aproape întodeauna dentară, cu propagare inițială în glandele salivare și aproape întodeauna apare reinfectarea pancreasului după încetarea tratamanentului, dacă dinții nu sunt tratați.

În cazul meu reinfectarea a apărut din cauză că am mâncat într-o zi (duminică dimineața) fără proteză dentară, din lene (somn fragmentat) ceea ce a dus la iritarea gingiei, după care am mâncat (foarte puțină) ciocolată și mai târziu cartofi prăjiți dați prin ceva (pâine uscată sau făină de porumb) într-un restaurant gol, care a intrat sub proteză, urmat de dureri de cap moderate și frisoane. Infectarea pancreasului se simte ca o durere moderată de stomac, suportabilă, uneori constantă, dar mai în spate și lateral, apare creșterea numărului globulelor albe, dar în limite.

Am reluat antibioticele, după 24 de ore încă am ușoare dureri de gingie, cap, spate și frisoane.

11:25 There is little doubt (to me) that Rome was named in honor of lord Rama, the most popular deity in India, on a Rama Navami day or April 21, 753 BC. Latin language is close to Sanskrit (common ancestor of most Indian languages) and probably evolved from a language that was spoken in India at that time. Roman, Greek and Hindi pantheons are similar. Romans came from India. (Dacian language was also close to Sanskrit, but from initial Indo-European migration towards west).

11:36 Rama was born in the present day city Ayodhya, Utar Pradesh, some 400 km away from the much newer but recognizable Taj Mahal mausoleum. Did Ceaușescu try to leave us a clue by having a relaxed, happy picture taken near it (to point the location)? Is Zoia (a Greek name) featuring a simplified version of Ardha Matsyendrasana yoga pose? Elena dressed in orange could also represent a happy Buddha, etc..

Uttar Pradesh is neighboring with Nepal, where Buddha was born in @ -500. Also close to eastern border of India, where the snakes could have landed from Australia.

A small contribution to the future to help solve some of history's mysteries. Time travel.


I know Ceaușescu was not who he said or we thought he was but probably Romanian patriots at the time convinced them to go there and do this little scene.   

7:15 Pytaghora and Buddha, both founders of philosophy, lived in about the same period of time.

King Ashoka known Buddhist missionaries.

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Scientology and Me

Intro

Was never too serious about the subject. Because i know Scientology is just a layer of the floating top of the pyramid. There are others above, like Dominicans, ninja, Buddhists. Horizontally could be at the same level as freemasons.

Same origin, same countries. Tom Cruise is not officially the leader of the church, he is the most known high rank member. Here is the site of the Hungarian poet Béla Kasza i believe it's him (initially pictures look low res, but if you click on them you will see some in full HD). Born in 62, he is not only good looking and sometimes doing his own stunts. He is a man of action. On 5:33 PM May 20 (picture date), mimicking a drunk Mexican caught in a road rage incident, he tried to kill me. When i called the Police, an operatic female voice asked me was if i was on a private property. Apparently they declined jurisdiction because of being on an reservation.
Time line

1974 was the year i started HS in Iași. Following grade school in Câmpulung (Suceava county, suci meaning needle or pine needle in Sanskrit), where apparently all kids where about 2 years younger than me, on the model of Palatine Class, my hole HS class, B, including teachers, where celebrities. I described this in detail on this blog post. Architect of all that happen in Câmpulung, later, until his death was Emil Bodnăraș. He had a brother and a villa în Câmpulung, but also appeared as a poor miner neighbor across the street, Aurel Bedrule. Another big mark in my life was made by native Hungarian Károly Király (Kiraly meaning king in Hungarian, with Carol being father of Michael, son of Mary, like in Mary  Hill), mentioned by Pacepa in his book as being tortured by Ceaușescu. But this is just the intro.

Some of the teachers in grade school. School director, Theodor Darie, looked like Austrian actor Karlheinz Böhm, who lived across the school with of course his wife who looked of course like Romy Schneider, age adjusted. Others; 1-4 grade teacher, Claudia Cardinale. 5-8 grade tutor, math, Elisabeth Taylor, physics Laura Antonelli.

Some of my colleagues. Hungarian soprano Annamaria Kovacs, famous Romanian folk singer Mircea Baniciu, others.

Could not have started without all these, cause it was my chemistry teacher who told me i should go to HS in a different place than Câmplulung, who had a few decent HSs though. I wanted to go to Bucharest, my father went there with my application, in the train he met someone who told him there was a new HS in Iași with some electronics classes built or assigned to the new Tehnoton electronics factory (mostly radios at that time). So he went in Iași at Tehnoton High School instead which was much closer (4 hours by train) with my application.

In September 1975 my father took me to Iași, however too late, could not find a place in the dorm so he went to IPL (furniture factory) which was next to Tehnoton HS where he knew the Party Secretary who again looked like Bodnăraș, in a different attire than my neighbor, big office, suit, whatever. He arranged for me to live with a supervisor who lived in a room in a building for singles who worked there. (At that time most of the married people hired in factories in Romania where assigned an apartment in a condo).

The guy looked like a Japanese actor. I could never find a room in the dorm the next years so i lived in rooms subrented in condos alone or with mates, each trimester in a different one, so i had like 12 different addresses in HS in Iași, except for vacations where i went to Câmpulung, mostly working at the furniture factory across the street.

Timotei was the son of a Baptist preacher from Suceava (sit of the county where Câmpulung was).

Looking very poor, we became "friends" at the end of the first year i guess. Opera singer Dénes Gulyás was 6 years my senior. Older than me all my colleagues (i mean, the actors) in HS, the exact opposite from grade school. I lived a whole trimester in an empty apartment with him, at the end of 3rd year or 1977, the year when Grease movie was made. He was athletic, was going to karate classes (something very rare indeed in communist Romania), i believe that's where he got his moves in the movie, he could swim 25 meters under water without breathing, he also had an electric guitar which he didn't let me touch. We were all playing ping-pong like crazy, at school and outside wherever we found a table. Towards the end of the week he started to become more and more depressed, Sunday was missing, he said he was going to church whatever and he was coming back Sunday night, shining. I remember the whole 3 months period i was eating only beans. One jar of beans, one hot dog (cold) and one piece of bread every lunch, for 5 lei.

Liliana, we haven't spoke much. I remember one time i went to an Indian movie, Vandana something just out of curiosity and i met with her "by chance" outside the cinema near where she lived. She told me her father put some sort of timer on her TV and she could not turn it on (those days we were going at school in the afternoon, i guess), it crossed my mind, but then i said to myself, if her father is like that what if he catches me there. So i didn't say the words, i just passed. Olivia Newton John was 12 years my senior, though she looked like a 7 grader, just too fragile to touch.

One day i took one of my cameras (Soviet "Smena 8M") at school, (had a portable lab at "home"), with a flash attached and all the girls, including Ioana (Joan Jett of course, who was then just so shy) started to run, hide their faces and yell. "No pictures", said the tutor, soprano Marina Krilovici. However hours later, they came down and we all went in the courtyard and took group pictures. This one is taken by me.
John on the left, ONJ in the middle left to Jane Fonda (chemistry teacher) with the flowers.



to be continued of course

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Johnny Cash and the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta

Every single American that possesses a radio knows about Johnny Cash and his most famous song, Ring of Fire. I bet there are numerous attempts to explain what's behind the poetry of the lyrics, here's one more. But this one's based on the real name of the singer and its meaning in Hungarian.
Johnny Cash seems to have been an influent Hungarian poet named Istvan Domonkos (Domon kos, pronounced cosh) also singer and guitar player.

Domonkos in Hungarian means Dominican. For those who don't know, Dominicans is one out of many religious orders that branched out of catholicism sometimein 12 century. An important one since many popes and most Grand Inquisitors where along centuries part of the order.

Istvan is a combination of Ivan which means John in several slavic languages and Isten which means God in Hungarian, and comes most likely from Ishtar. The complicated Hungarian ethno-genesis which might include Serbs fropm a more recent migration (One of first Hungarian kings is named Ladislav), the old Sumerians who in turn... etc....

Interesting part is St.Dominic's head is partly shaven, and he also introduced the rosary in catholicism which is of Buddhist and Hindu origin. St.Dominic mother had a dream about giving birth to a dog that would set the world on fire. In some depictions St.Dominic is shown with a dog. Literally setting the world on fire.
If Buddha's first sermon is called like in the title, Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta (Magadhan or Pali) or Dharmacakrapravartana Sūtra in Sanskrit meaning The Setting in Motion of the Wheel of the Dharma Sutta or Promulgation of the Law Sutta, his third one was about fire. Domonkos, a common Hungarian family name could have this etymology.

Budapest was named for at least 500 years until the 19 century Buda and Buddha's favorite language was Magadha Prakrit, while Hungarians today call themselves Magyars, suggesting Magar people of Nepal.

Buddha was born in Lumbini, Nepal, the heartland of several related people including Magars. Magars could have remained stranded in Europe in the 9th century as being guardians of silk road caravans when silk road was cut by a sultan. Or simply came over in their mission to spread buddhism to the world.

Dominicans have been always very influential within Catholic Church and from there over the whole world and this whole setup may had at some point tipped the fragile balance of direction of modern world development towards huge energy consumption, pollution, global devastating wars and global climate change. Deliberate.

Nowadays we all may see the Dominicans as a cult within Catholic Church which was or maybe still is influenced by some dramatically misunderstood buddhist teachings, like Buddha's third sermon.

Monday, September 16, 2019

Happiness of the Sadhu

Detachment, also expressed as non-attachment, is a state in which a person overcomes his or her attachment to desire for things, people or concepts of the world and thus attains a heightened perspective. It is considered a wise virtue and is promoted in various Eastern religions, such as Jainism, Taoism and Buddhism.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detachment_(philosophy)

Why didn't they say nothing about this verse in New Testament

https://www.google.com/search?q=god+bless+the+meek

Or this

https://www.google.com/search?q=it+is+easier+for+a+camel

"Psychic possessions refer to emotions, likes and dislikes, and attachments of any form."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jainism#Non-attachment_(aparigraha)

Graha, the Sanskrit word most likely at the origin of greed in English, gras (fat) in French, Romanian, etc..

http://spokensanskrit.org/index.php?mode=3&script=hk&tran_input=graha&direct=au&anz=100
(See the entries after the last compound words)


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aparigraha#Hinduism

"Addiction is a brain disorder characterized by compulsive engagement in rewarding stimuli despite adverse consequences."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Addiction

Wondering what could mean when a guy named Palmer says he's addicted to love


Love is cultural and has different meanings in different civilizations.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love#Cultural_views

https://www.google.com/search?q=anime+wink&source=lnms&tbm=isch#imgrc=hduVl0vHOh5glM:

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Sami, Sumerian and Semitic

Yet again starting to write something that i don't know where it's gonna take me to. I had a hunch about a possible similarity between Sami people and Sumerians but mostly from personal experiences. Sami people live in north and exhibit features of all Nordic people. Skin, hair and eye de-pigmentation due to lack of much UVB, an adaptation necessary for living at high latitudes.

I once found a whole Pinterest page showing blue eyes of... Egyptians, who were a civilization parallel if not related to Sumerian. But here is a page showing... Sumerians with blue eyes!

"Scientists at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark have tracked down a genetic mutation, which took place 6-10,000 years ago, and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today." Exactly. One mutation can occur only once, on one location of planet Earth.

Other time i found an image of an ancient statue of Thor (as in Thursday, remember) exhibiting an ank-like object. Thor could also be at the origin of name Horus.

If there is a link it can only be of North-South direction. Sumerians (and Egyptians) came from north and not the other way around. Because they show these northern features.

After a few searches i found some very interesting facts. Sami people, formerly known as laplanders, are unique among northern people both from genetic and linguistics points of view.

"In Norway, however, Sámi were still called Finns at least until the modern era (reflected in toponyms like Finnmark, Finnsnes, Finnfjord and Finnøy), and some northern Norwegians will still occasionally use Finn to refer to Sámi people, although the Sámi themselves now consider this to be an inappropriate term."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A1mi_people#Etymologies

"Though they speak a Finno-Ugric language, they are genetically distinct from other Finno-Ugric and Indo-European people."
https://www.laits.utexas.edu/sami/dieda/hist/genetic.htm

So were Sumerians in Near East. Genetically distinct, there is a great and yet unsettled debate about their origin.

"The Sumerians, and their neighbors the Elamites, as well as groups like the Hatti and Hurrians & Urartian, pose problems for this thesis. None of these groups seem to be Indo-European or Semitic, the two dominant language families of Near East by ~1,000 B.C. You have in the ancient Near East then a situation where the light of history reveals before us not the diversification of Indo-European and Semitic speaking farmers, but rather a host of unique and disparate peoples, all simultaneously lurching toward literate civilization, one after another."
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/gnxp/2012/10/ancient-dna-and-sumerians/

Then an idea came to me. The linguistics argument. And here what i found. A (non-linguist) historian researched for eleven years on this (as i said in the past, future of history and all sciences belongs to interdisciplinary studies) basically going against all academics, establishment, mainstream, name it.

"Juha Jantunen, professor of East Asian languages and cultures at the University of Helsinki, summarizes the linguists’ horror at Parpola’s findings: saying that Sumerian is a closer relative of Finnish than the Finno-Ugric Sami is like saying that humans are not, in fact, that closely related to apes but find themselves rather somewhere between the horse and the donkey." http://www.icge.co.uk/languagesciencesblog/?p=1336

"Donbaz said the most important dialects of the Akkadian language, which is a member of the Sami language family, were Assyrian and Babylonian"

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/veysel-donbaz-interpreter-of-dead-languages-139895

How about Semitic?
https://www.academia.edu/33654979/THE_UNITY_OF_HAMITO-SEMITIC_AND_SUMERIAN_LANGUAGE_FAMILIES_1

If we do a google search on phrase "origin of the Sumerians" we get an... Akkadian description. Anybody knows why? Because Akkadians where those who displaced Sumerian from the fertile lands between the two rivers and a delta (modern day Iraq). Akkadians are actually Africans. You can see from the picture of their bronze heads.

What i guess it happened was Sumerians were overcome by their own African slaves.

Survivors in the North of last Ice Age, mainly because they relied on fire and other technologies, but also the proximity of volcanoes in Iceland to survive (average temperatures during last ice age where about 12 degrees Fahrenheit lower), they were thousands of years technologically more advanced than the rest of the world. And they choose to colonize the naturally most fertile places on Earth like Egypt and Sumer (southern Mesopotamia, The Fertile Crescent).

As written in one of the first links in the post. Ice Age in Northern Europe ended about 8000 BC. Indo-Europeans, Cro-Magnon, whatever, started to advance north and Scandinavians could not have stopped them.  Europenization of Scandinavia (skanda nava, New Kingdom in Sanskrit) started. Few of the Sami survived to this day. Some of them, the elite, moved way south, in an area where less developed Africans and SW Asians would not pose much problems to them. Sumerian civilization started to peak about one or two thousand years later.

They brought in many peoples are slaves among them the Africans but they eventually got smarter and being numerous in the end took over. Or it might have also been a climate change that contribute it to their return... back North. But they could not find their way back all the way to Northern Scandinavia and started wondering and putting bases to new civilizations throughout Eurasia, from Ireland to Ural, Turkey, Mongolia and Japan, mainly creating the Aryan (master) race. But forever they will remember and hate the Semitic Akkadians who drew then out of the garden of Eden.

What. I was searching for pyramids in Scandinavia.

Climate change due to Earth precession drew the monkeys North?

Could this 13th century representation from an English manuscript of St Eustace 2nd century AD be an attempt to describe eccentricity of Earth's orbit around Sun.

There is a similar depiction of Christ in the page of "Saint Hubertus [who] was widely venerated during the Middle Ages. The iconography of his legend is entangled with the legend of Saint Eustace." Hibernus as adjective means winter in Latin. More answers to this mystery here.

Could this be an attempt to describe the eccentricity of Earth's orbit around Sun.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Anima, αμίαντο

Following an idea i opened a Wikipedia page that put in my face for the first time the word antaryAmin, अन्तर्यामिन्, meaning soul in Sanskrit.

I quoted a few days or weeks ago from an answer on Quora which was basically argumenting that vedic Sanskrit is very close to hypothetical PIE. (Proto Indo European Language).

Here comes in hand a host of arguments that strengthen that idea, all related to the word above.

Composed of two Sanskrit words, Antary and Amin.

Antary maye have give birth in Europe to the following words

Interior in Latin

Entendre in French

Enter in English

Aminat to

αμίαντο (in the sense of indestructible) in Greek

Anima mea in Latin

Derived verb AminAti to

Amâna (delay, put aside) in Romanian

Am (first person singular verb to be) in English

Mean in English

Also figured from the same page (by the same luck) the second part of the etymology of the name Siddhartha -  siddhi (supernatural power) + artha (true sense).

And the origin of the word "sfat" (advice) in Romanian. sphoTa (in the sense of disclosure).

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Demiurge

Most of what i call "enhanced" or extended or attempted exhausting etymologies i wrote so far are in Romanian and for a good reason. They really need them because of the chaos in dictionaries and hierarchically directed misinformation for the public by the academics themselves. And i got them ready anyways inevitably from the process of assimilating new words. But is English much different in that regard?

Let me make myself clear. I am not a linguist. But in the process of learning and using English while looking at dictionaries i can't help but compare words to the ones i know from Romanian and other languages . Some are semantically close but have totally different definitions. Some have similar definitions but write and pronounce totally different.

Why etymologies. Because the etymological definitions are a hierarchical and easy way to acquire new words. Instead of simply memorizing words and all the phrases that are being used into, (English after all is a language of phrases not individual words like most languages and can't use them like in Romanian where phrases are arranged totally differently). Etymological dictionaries and etymological method of learning a new language is best because it lets you, instead of memorizing words, just o put then in the right place in a hierarchical tree of words starting with linguistic roots and pick them form their place when needed instead of simply trying to remember a phrase. (Can't help but to mention here a semantic suggestion by the word etymology itself with seems to evocate the acronym ET and the english word mole).

Then after looking i realize that there are more than one definition, many definitions are incomplete and sometimes obsolete and after a while i start to be tempted to come with my own, at the beginning for myself and since that has already happened for a long time now i am willing if not compelled to share.

Here is one example. I just looked in a self proclaimed online etymological dictionary obviously for gathering information in an attempt to solve the the task chosen by the title of this blog post. Demi is pretty trivial so i tried, just because it's there and it's intriguing, the word dim.

And here are quotes from some of the results. "Perhaps". "Not known outside Germanic [languages]".

Linguistics is far from being an exact science. Though language is the only thing that binds us together. And suddenly came in mind the newly discovered by me today syntagm. "Free Negro Bond". No. Unfortunately language for most of us today is only a mean of tricking and hiding things. We rely mostly on different type of social cohesion. Social, (not linguistic) hierarchy. Though we pretend not to.

About 200 years ago a new linguistic theory emerged trying to... well, finally starting to turn linguistics into a science (Maybe because it was the first modern complex theory in the field of communications marked by lack of reliable interconnections between languages). A theory called Indo European Theory which stipulates a link between European and Indian languages that of course implies migrations and contacts not previously known or acknowledged. That Eurasian continent is not divided by the Caucasus Mountains, Caspian and Black Sea, etc. It is a continuous, gradually changing cultural whole with far more important links between East and West. And how could it had been different?

More than that. It seems that Sanskrit is the only known language that encompasses them all. Sanskrit in India is known to be thousands of years old, probably all the way to the war described in Mahabharata that apparently took place about 3700 years BC and beyond.

"Mikhail Lomonosov compared different language groups, including Slavic, Baltic ("Kurlandic"), Iranian ("Medic"), Finnish, Chinese, "Hottentot", and others, noting that related languages (including Latin, Greek, German and Russian) must have separated in antiquity from common ancestors."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages#History_of_Indo-European_linguistics

However, though universally accepted, the theory has never been put in practice. That is there is not one single Sanskrit etymology in the dictionaries i know of. Not direct, not through Latin and Greek. In other words, theory is dead since its birth. And i have a few explanations for it.

First, it implies Russian is a language related to all European languages. Then the heresy that Hindi by example is related to... i don't know, English "perhaps"? Latin and Greek being descendants of a language still spoken natively in small parts of India, Indonesia and Malaysia and other Southern Asian countries and being the liturgic language for Hinduism? And last but not least, the more common, "incorrect" or "countryside" style of Romanian has the most unmodified Sanskrit words of any known European language and probably comparable to Hindi?

Because of that. It is very difficult for someone to work at an etymology so important trying not to neglect Sanskrit without raising a number of hypothesis and let the reader to choose or decide what scientists should have been done longtime ago. But i will still try because of the last part of the word and the definition from Wikipedia.

"In the Platonic, Neopythagorean, Middle Platonic, and Neoplatonic schools of philosophy, the demiurge (/ˈdɛmiˌɜːrdʒ/) is an artisan-like figure responsible for fashioning and maintaining the physical universe." Intriguing and motivating enough? No? Than think of the root ur present at the end of the word that seem to come from what the historians call today "The birthplace of civilization" [slavery based civilization that is]. Most known to us from the word ziggurat, which again has the same root in it though not so stated in the definition.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ziggurat_of_Ur

But let's filnally bring up the definition from Wikipedia:

"The word "demiurge" is an English word from demiurgus, a Latinized form of the Greek δημιουργός or dēmiourgos. It was originally a common noun meaning "craftsman" or "artisan", but gradually it came to mean "producer", and then eventually "creator".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demiurge

But what... Google Translate has to say about the Greek word demi or dēmi?

My GT though cookies was setup to Hungarian. With the last phrase of the second paragraph of the Wikipedia page about the Ziggurat of Ur (the Palace of Ur-Nammu (the E-hursag). and even the name of Hungary in their language, Magyarorsag, where orsag means country, i tried by some sort of intuitive urge the word or the root named above, ur, in Hungarian, or Magyar as it is called by themselves and here is the result.

https://translate.google.com/#hu/en/ur

Got into deeper trouble with my little etymology that seem to get even further from being finished that i thought at the beginning. I'm not going to go much into that direction except to mention that some Hungarian scholars agree that one of the main source of Magyar language is Sumerian. Here are a few more words from Hungarian. And a few words from the neighboring... Romania.

Quite... the opposite of Hungarian?

Ok. Now let's get back to demi. Which by the way is part of another, closely related word, demigod and another one closely only semantically, demagog. In both, the component demi and dema have a totally different meaning than in demiurge. Not even trying to talk about democracy.

Though all these words starting with dim are supposed to be composed of Greek words, two of them don't even have a correspondant in modern Greek. For the other two we can see clearly the root dim which supposedly means people in Ancient Greek.

https://translate.google.com/#en/el/demiurge%0Ademigod%0Ademagogue%0Ademocracy

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%CE%B4%CE%AE%CE%BC%CE%BF%CF%82

One is completed with kratos. Ok. Here is a first for me. I found a Sanskrit etymology in Wiktionary! Ways to go! Let me the try in Wiktionary... demiurge itself! Nope. No luck here. Demiurge cannot be a craftsman who works for the people, according to the widely accepted definition, that of the creator of the Universe!

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/demiurge#Etymology

Calque (loan word) from Latin? Then demi here is just a morphism of semi from Latin back to Greek? https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/demigod#Etymology

Here is a better explanation from the origin of demi from demigod.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dimidius#Latin

Hence the confusion of the first part of demiurge and that of demigod. First is from Greek where it means... people. Second is grecized Latin (yest there is a such word at least in a definition on the web) where it means half.

Apparently we won't be able to solve this if we don't go to Sanskrit. Where we have dhimat, which is a synonym of... bodhisattva ("one who is on the way to the attainment of perfect knowledge")! "http://spokensanskrit.org/index.php?tran_input=dhImat&direct=se&script=hk&link=yes&mode=3

Could it be in the end demiurge is actually the God of Ur, who actually is an enlightened one? And that is acceptable as hypothesis only if we can get closer to the idea that in the beginning all languages on Earth were really close?

And since in French the word appeared the first time in 1546 In French we can see the word appeared for the first time in 1546

http://www.cnrtl.fr/etymologie/d%C3%A9miurge

And in English in 1670

https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=demiurge

It is still a mystery who created this word if out of Sanskrit and it is possible we will never know its true origin.

Also should mention the Sanskrit Urja, a possible source for both the word urge and work in English.

And last but not least. Oregon.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Romanian - Sanskrit Comparison

Cristian Ioanide - In Memoriam


"In principle, every difference between two related languages should be explicable to a high degree of plausibility and systematic changes, for example in phonological or morphological systems are expected to be highly regular (i.e. consistent). In practice, the comparison may be more restricted, e.g. just to the lexicon."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_linguistics

The generally accepted Indo-European theory in linguistics states that all languages in Europe and India have a common ancestor, the hypothetical PIE or Proto-Indo-European language.

However there are major disagreements regarding this hypothetical language and the reconstruction attempts so far lay in the domain of bizarre. No serious academic attention had been directed into reconstructing this hypothetical language. In dictionaries so far (like the Romanian Explicative Dictionary or DEX) though there are many basic words deemed as of unknown origin, generally attributed by some authors, mostly biased nationalist, to the Dacian language or the language we all assume it was spoken in Dacia before Romans arrived, there is not on single etymology given as PIE. In French i haven't seen a single word given of unknown etymology or as PIE but in both languages i found words that certainly remind me of Sanskrit. The English lexis may be also as rich as Romanian in Sanskrit roots. Interestingly enough, the words are distributed in different languages, as if Sanskrit divided or distributed separate chunks or lists of words to different inheriting languages though many are overlapping, like from English and Romanian.

It is almost impossible to believe that Romans did not keep or no archives are found regarding the different aspects of life in Dacia during their direct administration period which lasted some 165 years including basic lexis or pieces of written language. No written records are to be found in any archive about the Dacian language (with some dubious exceptions).

The subject of such records being hidden in archives for political reasons or even destroyed is a completely different story i won't start to dig in right now.

So personally following an intuition triggered by an anecdotal information i found in an article i read in early 90s which stated that a numbered a Romanian basic words are matching with perfectly similar Sanskrit ones like apa-apa (water), gand-gandiva (thought) etc. i tried to look in current online dictionaries like spokensankrit.org (formerly .de) just to verify. To my surprise they all seemed to have a Sanskrit corespondent, almost identical, down to pronunciation.

So i took the list of Romanian words of unknown origin (Wikipedia version) and started to look in that dictionary for more matches and found an abundance of words of undoubtful (to me) Sanskrit origin.

I assume the online dictionary mentioned above that is based on the widely recognized Monier Williams Sanskrit dictionary which is also available online from the University of Koln is still not complete though it numbers over half million entries. There are in there words that have obviously too many entered meanings [by volunteering contributors] of which some being even opposite, many probably coming from only one occurrence in an isolated text maybe used as metaphors. No one can tell. But i was pretty conservative in building this list and picked correspondences only from the roughly first 10-20% of meanings confirmed by the most redundancies (or close meanings) in the rest of the entered meanings staying mainly in the Monier Wiliams safe area. Interestingly, there are words, like gata that have the same corresponding many meanings both in Romanian and Sanskrit and this is obvious only for those who know Romanian as i cannot add more entries for words with different meaning in Romania being beyond the current purpose of this modest work.

Never finished checking that list because while browsing the dictionaries i started to find more and more words that where not on that list having a greater resemblance with Sanskrit words than with Latin or Old Slavonic (the precursor of all modern Slavic languages) of which etymologies are officially given in Romanian dictionaries and i started to build a list on a spreadsheet with all the words i could find that seemed to me closer to Sanskrit than Latin and Slavonic which are the officially accepted by academics main ancestors of Romanian language, besides the still largely unknown Dacian language. All words from the basic or day to day usage Romanian language lexis.

I also added verbs that seem similar in writting, pronunciation and meaning with nouns and adjectives in Romanian. https://sanskritstudio.wordpress.com/2013/03/05/the-sanskrit-past-passive-participle/. I am not a linguist but i assume in a few thousands years of separation some past participles may have morphed into adjectives and even nouns. Same thing happened in the dictionary itslef, noun from Sanskrit are translated like verbs in English.

Also while browsing this online dictionary i had the surprise to also come across many English words that seem to have a direct corespondent in Sanskrit of which some i added in a smaller list that is also included in this blog post.

My conclusion so far is there are many Sanskrit words in Romanian, maybe as many as 50% of the lexis of Romanian, but when they match, some of them identically as pronunciation, most of the time they do not coincide as first meaning. This indicates a strong but very old connection.

Could the reason for finding so many Romanian words of possible Sanskrit origin be the Dacian language was closed to Sanskrit which was also close to PIE. It is up to linguists in the future to follow these hypotheses. This work is by far not complete and i strongly believe what i found is intriguing enough to requires their attention. But i am also afraid many already knew about all these complex and contradictory issues, since i don't know, the first contact of modern western civilization with the eastern one, probably since German linguists Franz Bopp built the first known grammar of Sanskrit and for some obvious political reasons they chose to delay their findings until people of the world will be able to better deal with the Indo-European linguistic theory that if was to be applied would probably require extensive rewriting of dictionaries and why not, maybe history itself.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Bopp

When i first started to study the lexis of Sanskrit i started to ask myself how i will pronounce the words. In the end i realized the pronunciation follows pretty much Latin, as the several existing transliteration types use mainly Latin alphabet.

However there is an alternate way to figure pronunciation. Since Google Translate cannot translate Sanskrit and there is no other site on the internet that i know of that can pronounce any typed words in Devanagari script one can trick Google Translate to pronounce Sanskrit as Hindi since Hindi uses the same alphabet and almost the same pronunciation.

So i added links to every word in the list (done with Google Spreadsheets) written in Sanskrit with Devanagari script so you can click on then on the little speaker icon under the box where the word appears to hear the pronunciation. Most of those words do not even exist in Hindi.

There are also links provided for every Romanian word to Google Translate for both translation in English to eliminate any doubt and pronunciation for comparison of pronunciation with the paired Sanskrit words and also links for every Sanskrit word transliterated with Latin characters to different dictionaries where i found that word. There are more than 700 links in total.

Google Translate is not particularly good with Romanian phrases although lately it got much better. However, for individual words it is acceptable. The computer generated pronunciation in Romanian is kind of rough, compared to the one in Hindi, but good enough for the purpose.

For Devanagari script pronunciation of each separate letter here is an easy to use interactive page.

http://www.digitaldialects.com/Hindi/alphabet.htm

For comparing the words i used the following on-line dictionaries and lists:

Lists

https://www.google.com/search?q=Cuv.+autoht.+site%3Adexonline.ro%2F,

https://www.google.com/search?q=Et.+Nec.+site%3Adexonline.ro%2F

http://ro.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%C4%83_de_cuvinte_rom%C3%A2ne%C8%99ti_mo%C8%99tenite_probabil_din_limba_dac%C4%83

Sanskrit dictionary linkable per word and meaning

www.sanskritdictionary.com/ (default IAST transliteration)

Sanskrit dictionary linkable per word

http://spokensanskrit.org/

http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/monier/indexcaller.php

Dictionary not linkable per word (need to manually input the words below)

http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de

For Devanagari script pronunciation of each separate letter here is an easy to use interactive page.

http://www.digitaldialects.com/Hindi/alphabet.htm

Here is also a link to a Google sheet that holds the same table with the table itself framed below in this blog post.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1rFNHh0hUZoX05HMLQmA041H2pGj3fAPdmwAoGkkkJMk/edit?usp=sharing

[On August 18 2017 i discovered spokensanskrit.de has changed to spokensanskrit.org. I am currently working to restore all broken links below. Already re-established first 100 links. For the new links you have to scroll right.]


Also here is a link to a much shorter list that probably could be much longer with English words that could have direct sanskrit etymology and also the table.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Z30OzrhFN6aiqmK_cra0rv8z_wfRr0WJd9LxS5tsKrQ/edit?usp=sharing

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/24/Dacian_POW_IMG_6358.jpg
Roman Statue of a Dacian POW in 2nd century AD