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...berart creations trying to reconstruct and reconfigure an old color we, the humans of XXIst century, seem to have lost. Its memory is present in many Indo-European languages, which have had a word to describe this special color we hardly recall: the natural color of a clean sea, encompassing blue and green and gray; in Old English, that word was hæwen. The images herein ...
..., and the perpetuation and refinement of crafts. 3. From Whence Cometh Indo-European Tongues? Did a freshwater lake community flee a saltwater s... ... into the huge depression we know today as the Black Sea? Whence Cometh Indo-European Tongues? In prehistoric times—antedating written history b... ...d. Salt sea buried freshwater sands That process may have spawned the Indo-European family of languages, but lacking the power of the written wo... ...ount, but it seems consistent with the generally accepted theses that the Indo-European language family (1) evolved from one aboriginal ancestral to... ...er, scatter in all directions and seed the tongues of today’s speakers of Indo-European languages? A line in map connecting the Baltic Sea and Ind... ...... ...central Europe to Britain and Ireland, their Celts ancestors had laid the Indo-European seedbed for the English language‘s first roots. The huge ...
...f Memory-For millennia, mnemonics reigned over commerce, news, entertainment, and the perpetuation and refinement of crafts. -- 3. From Whence Cometh Indo-European Tongues?-Did a freshwater lake community flee a saltwater surge that filled the Black Sea and scatter its language west toward the Atlantic, southeast toward India, and northeast toward the Pacific? -- 4. Script...
...le, "hem" is the male plural and "hen" the female plural. "He" derives from the Indo-European word for "this (here)". Hence here, her, and ... h...
..., and the perpetuation and refinement of crafts. 3. From Whence Cometh Indo-European Tongues? Did a freshwater lake community flee a saltwater s... ... into the huge depression we know today as the Black Sea? Whence Cometh Indo-European Tongues? In prehistoric times—antedating written history b... ...ted. Salt sea buried freshwater sands That process may have spawned the Indo-European family of languages, but lacking the power of the written wo... ...ount, but it seems consistent with the generally accepted theses that the Indo-European language family (1) evolved from one aboriginal ancestral to... ...er, scatter in all directions and seed the tongues of today’s speakers of Indo-European languages? A line in map connecting the Baltic Sea and India... ...... ...central Europe to Britain and Ireland, their Celts ancestors had laid the Indo-European seedbed for the English language‘s first roots. The huge Ro...
...s of which the initials only are given, nor after MS (=manuscript) : IE ( =Indo-European), OE ( =Old English), MHG ( -Middle High German); AJSL (=A...
...opher, contemporary of Goethe, Schiller and Novalis. A pioneer in comparative Indo-European linguistics and comparative philology, Schlegel deeply i...
... (at least 18 with more than 1 million speakers); 75% Slavic group, 8% other Indo-European, 12% Altaic, 3% Uralian, 2% Caucasian Infant mortality rate...
...nology, to the discovery that there was a Keltic race, a Teutonic race, an Indo-European race, and so forth. A book that has had enormous influence in...
...es operating according to more or less ascertainable laws. If we trace any Indo-European lan- guage back far enough, we arrive hypothetically (at any ... ...since Aristotle has been dominated by the fact that the philosophers spoke Indo-European languages, and therefore supposed the world, like the sentenc...